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HEADS UP, SOUTHERN ILLINOIS: IT’S SPRING. HAZARDOUS WEATHER COMING OUR WAY.

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Just getting this out there; you know that this evening, things could get pretty serious for us weather-wise, so please take all due precautions, all across southern Illinois.

From the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA):

weather southern illinois

HAZARDOUS WEATHER OUTLOOK
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PADUCAH KY
414 AM CDT THU APR 9 2015
JEFFERSON-WAYNE IL-EDWARDS-WABASH-PERRY IL-FRANKLIN-HAMILTON-
WHITE-JACKSON-WILLIAMSON-SALINE-GALLATIN-UNION IL-JOHNSON-POPE-
HARDIN-ALEXANDER-PULASKI-MASSAC-GIBSON-PIKE-POSEY-VANDERBURGH-
WARRICK-SPENCER-FULTON-HICKMAN-CARLISLE-BALLARD-MCCRACKEN-GRAVES-
LIVINGSTON-MARSHALL-CALLOWAY-CRITTENDEN-LYON-TRIGG-CALDWELL-
UNION KY-WEBSTER-HOPKINS-CHRISTIAN-HENDERSON-DAVIESS-MCLEAN-
MUHLENBERG-TODD-PERRY MO-BOLLINGER-CAPE GIRARDEAU-WAYNE MO-CARTER-
RIPLEY-BUTLER-STODDARD-SCOTT-MISSISSIPPI-NEW MADRID-
414 AM CDT THU APR 9 2015

THIS HAZARDOUS WEATHER OUTLOOK IS FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN
ILLINOIS...SOUTHWEST INDIANA...WESTERN KENTUCKY AND SOUTHEAST
MISSOURI.

.DAY ONE...TODAY AND TONIGHT

THERE IS A CHANCE OF STRONG TO SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS...MAINLY
THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING AS A COLD FRONT MOVES IN FROM THE WEST.
DAMAGING WIND AND HAIL WILL BE THE PRIMARY HAZARDS. A TORNADO OR
TWO CANNOT BE RULED OUT. LOCALLY HEAVY RAIN IS ALSO A CONCERN.
PLEASE REFER TO OUR FLASH FLOOD PRODUCT FOR MORE INFORMATION
REGARDING THE FLASH FLOOD POTENTIAL.

.DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY

THE POTENTIAL FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS RETURNS EARLY NEXT WEEK.
AT THIS TIME...HEAVY RAINFALL AND FREQUENT LIGHTNING ARE THE PRIMARY
CONCERNS.

.SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT...

SPOTTER ACTIVATION APPEARS LIKELY LATER THIS AFTERNOON AND THIS
EVENING.

...FLASH FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH LATE TONIGHT...

THE FLASH FLOOD WATCH CONTINUES FOR

* PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN ILLINOIS...SOUTHWEST INDIANA...WESTERN
  KENTUCKY AND SOUTHEAST MISSOURI...INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING
  AREAS...IN SOUTHERN ILLINOIS...EDWARDS...FRANKLIN...GALLATIN...
   HAMILTON...JACKSON...JEFFERSON...PERRY IL...SALINE...WABASH...
   WAYNE IL...WHITE AND WILLIAMSON. IN SOUTHWEST INDIANA...
  GIBSON...PIKE...POSEY...SPENCER...VANDERBURGH AND WARRICK. IN
  WESTERN KENTUCKY...DAVIESS...HENDERSON AND UNION KY. IN
  SOUTHEAST MISSOURI...PERRY MO.

* THROUGH LATE TONIGHT

* MULTIPLE PERIODS OF THUNDERSTORMS EXPECTED THROUGH THURSDAY
  EVENING WILL BRING 1 TO 3 INCHES OF HEAVY RAINFALL TO THE
  REGION. THE POTENTIAL FOR FLASH FLOODING WILL INCREASE WITH
  EACH SUCCESSIVE ROUND OF STORMS.

* THE ADDITIONAL HEAVY RAINS MAY RESULT IN OR AGGRAVATE RIVER
  FLOODING ACROSS THE REGION.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A FLASH FLOOD WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS MAY DEVELOP THAT LEAD
TO FLASH FLOODING. FLASH FLOODING IS A VERY DANGEROUS SITUATION.

YOU SHOULD MONITOR LATER FORECASTS AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE ACTION
SHOULD FLASH FLOOD WARNINGS BE ISSUED.

MADIGAN ANNOUNCES CHARGES AGAINST DIRECTORS OF SALINE COUNTY DOMESTIC VIOLENCE NONPROFIT

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Attorney General Alleges Defendants Illegally Obtained State & Federal Grants,
Stole Charitable Funds for Domestic Violence Assistance
Screen Shot 2014-12-01 at 6.40.23 PMChicago – Attorney General Lisa Madigan today announced charges against the directors of a Saline County non-profit domestic violence shelter for falsifying records to obtain state and federal grant funding and stealing charitable funds for personal profit.
Madigan alleged that as directors of the Anna Bixby Women’s Center in Harrisburg, Barbara Wingo, 76, of Golconda, and her daughter, Terrie Wingo-Eichorn, 50, of Elizabethtown, submitted falsified documents to the state to obtain grant funding to provide fictitious counseling services to domestic violence victims.
Wingo, the organization’s executive director, was charged in Saline County Criminal Court Monday with one count of organizer of a continuing criminal financial crimes enterprise, a Class X felony, one count of continuing criminal financial crimes enterprise, a Class 1 felony, two counts of financial institution fraud, a Class 2 felony, one count of loan fraud, a Class 2 felony, one count of wire fraud, a Class 3 felony, three counts of forgery, a Class 3 felony, and one count of personal use of charitable assets, a Class 2 felony.
eichorn, terrie

Terrie Eichorn, on a fishing trip in Florida the day the indictments were announced. On whose money the trip was purchased is unclear.

Wingo-Eichorn, the assistant director, was charged with one count of continuing criminal financial crimes enterprise, a Class 1 felony, two counts of financial institution fraud, a Class 2 felony, one count of loan fraud, a Class 2 felony, one count of wire fraud, a Class 3 felony, two counts of forgery, a Class 3 felony, one count of personal use of charitable assets, a Class 2 felony, and one count of money laundering, a Class 3 felony.

The Anna Bixby Women’s Center, based in Harrisburg, is a nonprofit domestic violence shelter serving Gallatin, Hamilton, Pope, Saline and White counties.
“The defendants betrayed the trust of the taxpayers and charitable foundations who intended their donations to help survivors of domestic violence as they attempt to rebuild their lives,” Madigan said. “We will prosecute this case to ensure justice is achieved.”
Madigan alleged that in 2014 the defendants ordered employees to falsify documents that showed the Center was providing domestic violence counseling in order to receive state and federal grant funding through the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, the Attorney General’s Office, the Illinois Department of Human Services, the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Madigan also alleged the defendants committed loan fraud in submitting false documentation to obtain a $100,000 loan to fund the operation of Salon 716, located in Harrisburg, which is owned by their company, I. Downey Inc. Madigan alleged the defendants submitted false documents to their lending bank fraudulently claiming the Anna Bixby Women’s Center received donations from the salon.
Additionally, Madigan alleged Wingo-Eichorn used more than $1,800 in charitable funds from the organization to purchase personal items, including computers and a 32-inch LCD television with a Nintendo Wii. Madigan alleged further that Wingo-Eichorn stole portions of donations to the Women’s Center distributed from the Glenn Poshard Foundation that were awarded to benefit of abused children during the 2013 Christmas season.
The cases were investigated by Madigan’s office, the U.S. Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of the Inspector General. Assistant Attorney General Jonas Harger and Associate Directors James S. Dorger and Louis Dolce are handling the cases for Madigan’s Public Integrity Bureau.

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Charged with yanking wife around the yard by her hair; Mills man charged with animal cruelty

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Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.38.33 AMSALINE CO.— An Eldorado man who served 36 days in jail in 2013 after a misdemeanor conviction for Domestic Battery has found himself in a similar situation.

According to reports, dispatchers received a 911 call March 17 at approximately 10:07 a.m. advising of a domestic in progress at 709 Madison Street, Eldorado, described as a man grabbing a woman by her hair and dragging her around.

When officers arrived John Michael Lincoln, Jr., 44, advised that he and his wife Denise had been out in the yard arguing but that nobody had touched anybody.

That didn’t square well with authorities, given that Denise red marks on her forehead.

A neighbor informed police they saw Mr. Lincoln grab Mrs. Lincoln by the hair of her head several times and shove her down in a doorway.

Denise Lincoln informed officers that her husband had “beat me really bad last week” and showed the bruises still present from that beating.

John Michael Lincoln was taken into custody and charged with two counts of felony Domestic Battery alleging that he head-butted his wife and then grabbed her by the hair and dragged her.

Cash bond in the unemployed Mr. Lincoln’s case has been set at $500.

If he makes bond, the likelihood he will ever see the cash again is remote as he still owes $367 in fines and fees from his 2013 case.

Strangled

A Harrisburg meth felon has been charged in two separate violence cases.

John Eric Owen, 47, of the 300 block of South Vine St., Harrisburg, has been charged in two separate cases two days in a row.

In the first case, Owens is charged with one count of Aggravated Domestic Battery after authorities say on March 21 he strangled Beth Emmons.

He is also charged in that case with two counts of Domestic Battery for allegedly hitting Emmons in the face and then in the back.

Details were not available in the second case except to say that Owens is charged with one count of Theft and three counts of Domestic Battery for an incident that allegedly took place March 22.

Owen was sentenced to 60 days in the county jail and two years probation after he was convicted of Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine March 5, 2003.

He still owes $2,960 from that case.

Owen spent 90 days behind bars in 2010 after being convicted of Unlawful Possession of Cannabis.

He still owes $500 in fines and fees from the 2010 case.

No bond information was available in either case.

Crimes against animals

Adam Wesley Fuerback, 40, of 715 Puckett St., Carrier Mills, has been charged with four crimes against animals.

According to investigator Stacey Ballard, of the Illinois Department of Agriculture, on February 18, Fuerback committed the offense of Cruelty to Animals twice, once when he knowingly starved a buckskin horse and a second time when he knowingly starved a sorrel horse.

Fuerback is also charged with one count of Violation of an Animal Owner’s Duties claiming that he failed to provide sufficient quantity of good quality, wholesome food and water to three horses and one count of Livestock Running At Large for allegedly not providing the necessary restraints to keep them confined.

Fuerback was taken into custody March 19 by deputy Mychal Gooch and was later released after a $500 cash bond was posted on his behalf by Marian Tolbert of South Main St., Harrisburg.

’Rado man charged with head-butting wife

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SALINE CO.— An Eldorado man has been charged after his wife called police saying he beat her because he thought she was having an affair.

On March 3 at 10:06 a.m. Eldorado police were dispatched to a residence at the 700 block of Panama Street, Eldorado, in reference to a call from Rebecca Evelynn Butler, 29, of the 700 block of Big Four Street, Eldorado, who said she had been beaten by her husband James Butler.

When officers arrived, Rebecca Butler told them she had been at home cleaning when her husband came rushing into the house, started grabbing her, head-butted her several times, threw her on the ground, pushed her head several times and called her a “cheating sl*t,” then dragged her around.

She said that her husband was upset because he believed she has been sleeping with someone else.

Officers noted that Rebecca had scratches on her neck and scuff marks on the outside of her forearms.

She also told officers she had an active Order of Protection against her husband…and that James had taken her purse.

Officers found James Butler at his grandmother’s house on Hardy Street in Eldorado.

When asked if his wife had an active OP against him, he said he thought the OP had expired the day before.

Officers informed James the OP was still active.

And that’s about the time James said he wanted read his rights.

After that was done, when asked, he said his wife’s purse could be located under his Jeep Cherokee.

Officers recovered the purse from under the front passenger side wheel.

His pissivity over his belief that he had a straying spouse came at a very high price.

James Butler was booked into the county jail on one count each of Domestic Battery causing Bodily Harm, Domestic Battery making Physical Contact, Home Invasion causing Injury and Violation of an Order of Protection.

James Butler is a convicted felon from 2003 after being found guilty on one count of Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine for which he was sentenced to 24 months probation.

Butler was released from custody March 8 after posting a $1,000 cash bond.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.47.31 AMStrangled and punched

In an unrelated case, a Marion man has been charged with three violence counts after authorities say he attacked a family or household member.

According to information filed in the case, on March 25, Johnathon B. McKinney, 28, of 908 North Bentley, Marion, committed the offense of Aggravated Battery when he strangled Elizabeth Hirsch.

McKinney is also charged with two counts of Domestic Battery; one for allegedly pushing Hirsch, and the other for allegedly punching her, causing damage to her eye.

McKinney was released from police custody March 22 after a $1,000 bond was posted on his behalf by Candace McKinney, of Herrin.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.47.47 AMRoyal theft

A Harrisburg convicted felon has been charged with swiping booze from Huck’s.

Sabrina Anna Maria Stewart, 26, of West Logan Street in Harrisburg, has been charged with Retail Theft after authorities say on March 19 she walked out of the Poplar Street Huck’s convenience store with a bottle of Crown Royal that she didn’t bother paying for.

Stewart earned her first sticky fingered felony conviction in 2011 when she was found guilty of Theft $300-$10,000.

Not surprisingly, for a thief, Stewart still owes $1,417 in fines and fees from that case.

She earned her second felony on Elvis’ birthday, January 8, 2014 when she was found guilty of Criminal Trespass to Residence with Persons Present and well… Theft, for which she was sentenced to 30 months probation.

Nobody was surprised to find out she still owes some $2,009 in fines and fees from that case.

No bond information was available for Ms. Stewart’s latest alleged heist because, as of press time, the warrant for her arrested hadn’t been served yet.

Time-honored question of why a person would drive on suspended license with drugs in car unanswered

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SALINE CO.— Methamphetamine, pills and now driving with both onboard as well as on a suspended license appears to be the going thing this issue.

As evidence of this, a traffic stop on Barnett Road in Harrisburg landed an Eldorado woman and Carrier Mills man behind bars on drug charges.

David E. Garris, II

David E. Garris, II

Information filed in the case alleges that on March 21, at approximately 10:26 a.m. David E. Garris, II, age 35, of US Rte. 45, Carrier Mills, was spotted driving a blue Chevy Blazer eastbound on Barnett Street.

The officer recognized Garris and knew his license was suspended.

A quick check of his license information revealed that he was wanted.

Garris was taken into custody and the vehicle inventoried prior to being towed and 41 grams of methamphetamine was located in the console.

Lori Christine Rovito

Lori Christine Rovito

A passenger in the truck, 43-year-old Lori Christine Rovito, of Upchurch Street in Eldorado, for whatever reason consented to a search of her purse, in which police say they found one tablet of Alprazolam.

It was at about that time that Rovito produced a smaller purse from the waistband of her pants in which authorities say they discovered two grams of cannabis, one gram of methamphetamine, three more Alprazolam tablets and one glass smoking pipe which contained burnt residue.

Garris was charged with Driving Suspended and Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine 15-100 grams.

Rovito was also taken into custody and charged with one count each of Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine 15-100 grams and Unlawful Possession of a Controlled Substance.

While Rovito doesn’t have much of a criminal history in Saline County, the same cannot be said for her buddy Garris.

On August 27, 2001 Garris was sentenced to 12 months probation, which he violated at least twice, which added a few more months to his probation in July, then November, 2002.

Garris entered the ranks of the area’s convicted felons in 2010 when he was arrested and charged with Unlawful Delivery of Methamphetamine 5-15 grams, Unlawful Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Child Endangerment and Unlawful Manufacture/Delivery of Cannabis 30-500 grams.

He ultimately pleaded to the cannabis charge and was sentenced to 30 days in the county jail and 30 months probation.

Not surprisingly enough he violated that probation as well when he was arrested April 4, 2012 and charged with Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine Precursors 20-100 grans and Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine Manufacturing Materials.

He pled to the manufacturing materials charge and was sentenced to the Illinois Department of Corrections for five years.

He was also ordered to fork over $2,553 in fines and fees, of which he has paid nothing.

This time, Garris was sprung from the county jail March 22 after a $2,000 cash bond was posted on his behalf by Zachary Russel, of South Ledford Street in Harrisburg.

Rovito was released from custody the next day, March 23, after a $1,500 cash bond was posted on her behalf by Alyse Williams, of Largent Street in Harrisburg.

Meth and driving suspended

In an unrelated case, an Eldorado man has been charged with Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine after he was stopped by officers for driving erratically.

According to court documents, on March 18 off-duty Eldorado officer Adam Stanley contacted dispatch and reported that he had witnessed a car cross the centerline on State Street in Eldorado.

When officer Eron Williams executed a traffic stop, he discovered the driver, 52-year-old Timothy Wayne Moore, of Panama St., Eldorado, was not only driving on a suspended license but was wanted on a Saline County warrant for Failure to Appear.

TIMOTHY WAYNE MOORE

Timothy Wayne Moore

Timothy Wayne Moore

Subsequent to his arrest, officer Williams found a small plastic bag in Moore’s front right pants pocket.

Inside that bag was another baggie, which contained a crystalized substance.

In Moore’s left front pants pocket Williams found another baggie that contained a white powdery substance and a small container that contained several different types of pills.

Moore claims to have a prescription for the pills from VA.

Both the crystalized substance and white powdery substance field-tested positive for methamphetamine.

By all accounts, Moore didn’t claim to have a script for the meth, and the VA likely would be hard-pressed to convince anyone that they’re moving that particular hillbilly heroin among their patients.

Moore was booked into the county jail on a single charge of Unlawful Possession of Methamphetamine.

Cash bond in the case has been set at $1,000.

Darwin award candidates arrested after getting truck stuck during burglary

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Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.54.08 AM

In a Facebook post following a previous arrest, Matt Ozment is shown here with one of his fans, identified as Amanda Gail West, who were making light of his presence in the news…a tact that will probably continue until Ozment gets into enough trouble with the law to end up taking showers with large, hairy men.

 

SALINE CO.— It appears that Saline County will have yet another entry for this year’s Darwin Awards handed out to the most stupid actions performed by a human being.

This issue’s entry comes in the form of a couple of Harrisburg residents, specifically Jennifer M. Quertermous, 32, of 275 Gibbons Rd., Harrisburg and Matthew Ray Ozment, 32, of 218 West Lincoln St., Harrisburg.

Their candidacy came about following a lame attempt to get away from burglary in rural Saline County, this according to police.

According to information filed in the case, dispatch received a call March 18 at approximately 1:26 p.m. in reference to a burglary at 1135 Liberty Road.

The caller and homeowner, Lowell Furlong, told authorities his house had been trashed and that there was a red Ford Explorer stuck in the mud in his back yard.Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.59.34 AM

When police arrived they spotted Ozment near Furlong’s barn trying to get the truck out of the mud with Quertermous firmly ensconced in the passenger’s seat.

Since Ozment and Quertermous didn’t appear to be going anywhere soon, Furlong showed Deputy Wes Bebout, Detective Mike Jones and Deputy Steve Sloan a window in the rear of the house that had been busted out.

When Bebout, Sloan and Jones searched the house to make sure nobody else was still inside ransacking the place, they found that all the drawers and cabinets in the house had been opened and numerous items lying around on the floor.

Once the house was cleared, the officers went out to see how Ozment and Quertermous were getting along with their getaway.

That’s about the time Bebout noticed the Explorer was full of items including dishes, clothing and purses.

Furlong and Melinda Harris identified some of the items as coming from the house.

And that’s about the time Quertermous and Ozment were relieved of their struggle to get away and were taken away to the county detention center where they were both charged with one count each of Burglary and Theft.

While Ms. Quertermous doesn’t appear to have much of a criminal history in Saline County, her cohort in crime Mr. Ozment doesn’t appear to suffer from the stigma of a lack of convictions.

He earned his first felony conviction on March 4, 1999 when he was convicted of, wait for it… Burglary.

His second felony conviction, a little more than a year later, on May 1, 2000, was for Obstruction of Justice for which he was sentenced to four years in the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC).

On August 11, 2005 Matthew earned himself another three-year sentence in IDOC after a conviction for Aggravated DUI 3rd+ and a four-year sentence after a conviction in a separate case for Retail Theft, to run concurrently.

He still owes $2,010 in fines and fees from both those cases.

Quertermous and Ozment appear to have the requisite employment status for such a heist—that of “un,” as in, unemployed.

Their breeding skills seem to be intact: Ms. Quertermous listed herself as a divorced mother of three and Mr. Ozment an unmarried father of one. It’s unclear whether any of the progeny are mutual.

Cash bond was set in both their cases at $2,000 each.

So much for the black book of secrets: Steve Patton now a felon on single-count charge

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Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 1.21.13 PM

Steve Patton is shown from a “PlentyOfFish” online dating service in 2013 trying on many expressions (and shirts.) The government showed that former pharmacist Patton was trading pills for sex and were able to get him to take a plea to a single count of Illegal Dispensing at his pharmacy, Medicap in Harrisburg, rather than have all of it brought out. It was anyway, when Patton filed to have the 2014 indictment dismissed…and the government fought back.

 

SALINE CO.—One of Saline County’s better-known big names is now a federal felon.

In a story that Disclosure was following closely when it first emerged in 2012, but which was little but a blip on the radar when charges came down in 2014, Larry Steven Patton, better known as Steve Patton, former pharmacist for Medicap Pharmacy in Harrisburg, was charged last August with a single count of Illegal Dispensation of Controlled Substance.

The matter was handed down as an indictment August 20, 2014, two years and three weeks to the day when numerous government agents descended on Medicap Pharmacy in Harrisburg, situated just behind Huck’s on U.S. 45/Commercial Drive, and began an inventory of controlled substances—pills—in the business.

The ultimate outcome of that investigation lead to the conclusion that on or about July 12, 2012, Patton, a registrant authorized to dispense controlled substance, knowingly and intentionally dispensed four pills unlawfully; these were each two milligrams of Xanax. The indictment stated that in doing so, he acted outside the scope of professional practice and not for a legitimate medical purpose.

Who was it that was wired?

It’s never been made clear to whom Patton “dispensed” (gave) the pills after his attorney fought with federal prosecutors over the indictment and videotape that caught Patton; however, for a long time, it was speculation that it was Carolyn

Carolyn Glore McGhee, known as “Butter” McGhee (because everything about her is nice to look at “butter” face), was arrested in the fall of 2012 and only just got off probation for her controlled substance felony. While jailed at Saline County Detention Center, she was complaining about “Steve” needing to “get her out of there” or she was “going to start talking.” Problem was…she may already have done so. But federal court records don’t make that clear.

Carolyn Glore McGhee, known as “Butter” McGhee (because everything about her is nice to look at “butter” face), was arrested in the fall of 2012 and only just got off probation for her controlled substance felony. While jailed at Saline County Detention Center, she was complaining about “Steve” needing to “get her out of there” or she was “going to start talking.” Problem was…she may already have done so. But federal court records don’t make that clear.

Glore Thaxton McGhee, the Hardin County woman formerly of Harrisburg who has as many nicknames as she has surnames (“Butter” and “Grinch” being among that number) and who herself is now a convicted felon thanks to her own antics.

Even Patton’s hubris under his charges, however, wherein he brought about revelation of all the pills-for-sex he was trading and the initials of the women he’d conducted business with, failed to clarify whether it was indeed McGhee who was wired and sent in to Patton on July 12, 2012, in order to nail him for such trade, something he’d long been rumored in Harrisburg and its surrounds to have been doing.

The court record, however, shows that someone, a female, wired up and got involved with Patton to the extent that the government got him on that very serious charge.

The suggestion that it was McGhee came after she was busted for moving pills herself on two dates: May 23 and June 13, 2012, to a “confidential source” who turned out to be Inspector Will Sandusky of the Southern Illinois Drug Task Force.

After she outed herself by getting busted for delivering a substance containing hydrocodone to Sandusky, she became part of the investigation into where she obtained the pills…and that turned up Patton’s pharmacy, Medicap.

McGhee had a hard time while locked up in Saline County Detention Center, where it was said that she was telling people on recorded phone calls to “Tell Steve to get me OUT of here!” and that if someone didn’t post her bond soon, she was going to “start talking” about her “little black book.”

Whether that was the case or not remains unknown.

Steve likes em ugly

It had been speculated for years that Patton, who has a penchant for very unattractive women, had been seeing McGhee. His ex, Linda, finally got tired of the rumors and, a few weeks after the federal agents descended upon their business July 31, 2012, she got tired of everything else, too, decided to dispose of her husband in the process. She ended up with the pharmacy, and he ended up on online dating sites about a year later, trying to catch “a girl to change my life” on plentyoffish.com.

There was no indication, by the time of that posting (late 2013), that McGhee was anywhere near Patton. However, when the indictment actually came down, and Patton was facing his accusers last year, he filed, by way of his attorney Glenn Davis, a motion to dismiss the indictment and a motion to suppress, or otherwise exclude, video and audio recordings, this in October of 2014.

The memorandum of law Patton’s attorney filed indicated that the indictment should be dismissed on grounds of entrapment, and should suppress or otherwise exclude the July 12, 2012, video and audio recordings under either the Fourth Amendment of Federal Rule of Evidence 403.

In this memorandum, Davis noted that the defense of entrapment consists of two elements: government inducement of the crime; and a lack of predisposition on the part of Patton to engage in criminal conduct.

He then noted the five factors that help inform whether the defendant had the necessary predisposition to commit the charged offense: the character or reputation of the defendant; whether the suggestion of criminal activity was originally made by the government; whether the defendant was engaged in criminal activity for a profit; whether the defendant evidenced a reluctance to commit the offense, overcome by government persuasion; and the nature of the inducement or persuasion offered by the government.

The argument; “excellent reputation”

“The most important factor is whether the defendant exhibited a reluctance to commit the offense that government agents overcame,” Davis wrote by way of argument.

He then went on to espouse Patton’s “excellent reputation.”

“Before the events in 2012, Patton had not been the subject of any regulatory investigations or complaints, an unblemished period dating back to 1974,” Davis wrote. “Patton also had an exemplary civic reputation. He served on the Foundation Board for the Harrisburg Medical Center, participated in the hospital’s annual fundraiser, volunteered at the health clinic, sponsored a Little League team, officiated youth football team games, and employed nine or ten people in the community. Finally, Patton had not been the subject of any other legal matters, either civil or criminal.”

Enter “the CS”

Then Davis went on to write that “on July 9, 2012, members of the DEA St. Louis Field Division and Illinois State Police interviewed Carolyn McGhee. According to a Report of Investigation, Patton and McGhee had been friends for the past several years. The report implies that Patton had provided back pain medications to McGhee, who could not afford her prescription for them, in the past without remuneration but had discontinued doing so. On information and belief, McGhee has subsequently pled guilty to distribution of controlled substances.

Three days later the Illinois State Police arranged for a confidential source, who pled guilty to drug trafficking charges in September of 2012, to call Patton so that Patton could be induced to sell pills to this confidential source. Having recently committed to stop providing a friend with pain medication for her back pain, the government nonetheless overcame Patton’s commitment and induced him to sell prescription drugs to the confidential source. The government’s own Report of Investigation bears this out. According to the synopsis of the undercover operation on July 12, 2012, Patton told the confidential source that ‘he could not and would not give [the source] drugs.’ When the confidential source persisted, Patton stated he could provide the confidential source with some money. The confidential source then suggested that they meet at the pharmacy. Once at the pharmacy, the confidential source repeatedly pressed Patton for a couple of Xanax. ‘After a back and forth discussion over the pills,’ Patton finally ‘said OK to [the source].’ The confidential source then told Patton that she wanted some Xanax to calm her nerves. It was after this third refusal that Patton finally relented and provided the source with the Xanax.”

Employees back him up

“The government’s subsequent interviews with employees of Medicap Pharmacy provide additional evidence that the government suggested the criminal activity,” Davis wrote. “Amy Phipps, an employee at the pharmacy, told the government that ‘she was not aware of any incidents where Patton retrieved medication from the pharmacy shelf and left the pharmacy, nor was she aware of any incidents where the pharmacy was missing controlled substances.’

“Christine King, a twenty-year veteran of the pharmacy, told the government that while Patton’s behavior was peculiar and that she believed he was meeting mistresses, she had ‘never witnessed any theft or illegal distribution of controlled substances by Patton.’ Kimberly Fromm, Medicap Pharmacy’s full-time pharmacist for the past five years, stated that she was not aware of anything that would require the presence of investigators. She added that she had never observed any activity or behavior by Patton that she considered to be suspicious or worrisome. Finally, Patton’s wife, Linda, who also worked at the pharmacy, stated that she had no knowledge of her husband providing pills to anyone without a valid prescription.”

Under these auspices, Davis was asking for the indictment to be dismissed, since it was his opinion that the government hadn’t overcome the burden of proving that there wasn’t undue suggestion that Patton commit a crime.

Unfortunately, Davis might not have been aware that Patton had, for years, been alleged to have been trading pills for sexual favors from the unattractive women he craved, including not only McGhee, but also another local felon, Tara Sherrod, as well as others.

It’s not like Patton’s proclivities weren’t publicized: This information came out at trial in 2010, when Tim Monroe was convicted of trafficking cocaine…and McGhee was one of the witnesses.

Asks to strike video

Davis also took issue with a video that had been made of “the CS’” encounter with Patton:

“In this case, the video recording from July 12, 2012 is so grainy and dark and the audio so garbled that it is nearly impossible to determine what it depicts or what has transpired. Yet, the dark setting and furtive appearance of the video is unfairly suggestive of misconduct. The recording occurred well after 8:00 P.M. As a result, any attempt to show this video to a jury would unfairly prejudice Patton, confuse the issues, and mislead the jury. Indeed, courts frequently exclude evidence of a similarly unclear nature – particularly where officers or confidential sources are available to otherwise testify about the events.”

Tara Sherrod is likely the “TS” whom the government said was also receiving pills from Steve Patton while he was still at Medical Pharmacy in Harrisburg. Sherrod is one of a half-dozen or so women with whom Patton had been alleged for years to have a bizarre penchant toward, none of them considered the best-looking of the bunch. It was said that Patton selected unattractive women with drug problems to have affairs with so that not only would no one else come along and take them from him, but so that he could control them and they wouldn’t, as a consequence, get him in trouble. That turned out to not be the case, however, with at least one of them: Carolyn Glore McGhee.

Tara Sherrod is likely the “TS” whom the government said was also receiving pills from Steve Patton while he was still at Medical Pharmacy in Harrisburg. Sherrod is one of a half-dozen or so women with whom Patton had been alleged for years to have a bizarre penchant toward, none of them considered the best-looking of the bunch. It was said that Patton selected unattractive women with drug problems to have affairs with so that not only would no one else come along and take them from him, but so that he could control them and they wouldn’t, as a consequence, get him in trouble. That turned out to not be the case, however, with at least one of them: Carolyn Glore McGhee.

He put forth substantial case law showing why, in his estimation, the video shouldn’t be used…but the court didn’t see it that way, and the video evidence—and the indictment—stood.

This was determined decisively when the government got involved and revealed the rest of what they were holding close to the vest: the investigation and what it turned up.

And that apparently proved to be a bit much for Davis, as well as for Patton, who, it appeared, had been lying to his attorney about what was REALLY going on with the women and the pills…nothing really unusual, as guilty defendants often lie to their attorneys.

But this was quite the lie.

Government busts him out

In response, on October 29, 2014, the government wrote about Patton that he “has been providing pills to several different women in an attempt to gain sexual favors since 2006. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has determined that Patton’s pharmacy had thousands of Xanax and Hydrocodone pills unaccounted for over a two-year period.”

Specifically, they stated, Medicap was missing 6,372 Hydrocodone/APAP 7.5/325 mg tablets.

“The investigation revealed that Patton was providing pills to at least the four following women: TS, BG, CM and the CS. Patton had a relationship with TS for which he provided her with prescription medication without a prescription since 2006 until just before the search warrant was executed in 2012. CM had a similar relationship.”

Sources have indicated that “TS” is Tara Sherrod; CM could be Carolyn McGhee. If “CM” is McGhee, then who “the CS” is remains a mystery.

“Patton first met the CS approximately seven years ago and a sexual relationship ensued,” the government’s argument proceeded. “The CS was being prescribed 120 Hydrocodone tablets and Patton would provide the CS with 150 tablets, rather than the prescribed amount. Additionally, Patton was providing the CS with an unlabeled prescription bottle of 50-60 Hydrocodone tablets every other month. The CS never paid for any of the prescriptions or unlabeled bottles, a trend that would continue for the next seven years. Patton even provided the CS with keys to the pharmacy for several hours earlier in 2012; providing her with pills without him there.”

‘Sugar Daddy’

“Around October 2011,” the government wrote, “the CS began receiving 5 mg, 7.5 mg and 10 mg stock bottles of Hydrocodone tablets from Patton. The CS estimates that she received one 500 count bottle and three or four 100 count bottles between October 2011 and July 2012. Patton often made sexual advances toward the CS, which the CS would promise, even if she never delivered on. Additionally, Patton would provide the CS with cash on a bi-weekly basis ranging anywhere from $200-$800 and Patton also purchased at least ten (10) vehicles for the CS over the past seven years. The CS referred to Patton as her ‘sugar daddy.’

“In a previous interview with the DEA, the CS described how a normal transaction with Patton occurs. The CS stated that she would call Patton at Medicap Pharmacy, where he worked during normal business hours and make arrangements to meet him after work. Patton usually had the CS meet him at the Elk’s Lodge bar where she would suggest that they go to the pharmacy. Once there she would ask Patton for pills which he would subsequently give. The CS said that Patton is often hesitant but would always end up giving them to her.”

On July 12, 2012, ISP conducted an investigation that resulted in the acquisition of four Xanax pills, the government wrote. The pills were received by the CS from Patton at Medicap Pharmacy. Surveillance for the purchase was conducted by the Southern Illinois Drug Task Force and DEA.

“The CS called Patton while he was working at Medicap Pharmacy asking if Patton could meet in person later that evening,” documents state. “Patton told the CS to meet him as usual at 9:00 p.m. outside of the Elk’s Lodge bar. At 8:57 p.m., the CS arrived at the bar and parked next to Patton’s vehicle. After suggesting they go to the pharmacy, Patton and the CS drove their respected vehicles to Medicap Pharmacy.”

The video

The government’s documents go on to explain what’s on the video:

Upon arrival, no words are exchanged as Patton unlocks the doors. After entering the pharmacy office, the CS and Patton resume their conversation and the CS asks for pills. Eventually Patton pulls his penis out of his pants and tells the CS “Just touch it, come here and touch it.” The CS refuses and then confronts Patton.

CS: “I fuck you for drugs, is that it?”

Defendant: “You’re good at it.”

CS: “Well I’m glad somebody thinks so.”

“Patton illegally distributed to the CS four, 2 mg Xanax pills and adds ‘that’s strong shit,’” the documents show. “The CS then thanks Patton and quickly leaves, but not before Patton says ‘if you don’t come here, I’ll never see you again’ in an attempt to gain sexual favors in exchange for the pills. Patton later learned that the CS had taped the transaction and requested TS, one of the other girls he was providing with pills, to have a look around the CS’s home for the tape.” This lends to the viability that “the CS” might have indeed been Carolyn McGhee, as the two are friends.

During his interview, the government contended, Patton admitted to illegally giving 10 to 12 pills of Xanax and Hydrocodone to the CS from time to time.

“Patton estimated that he gave them about once of month over a two-year period. Patton admitted to having a sexual relationship with the CS over the last couple of years. He admitted that the affairs would take place inside the pharmacy after hours, he would allow the CS in the pharmacy alone, and he would give her pills from an unmarked prescription bottle. Patton admitted he knew it was wrong,” they wrote.

The rebuttal of Patton’s argument

The government stated, therefore, that there was no entrapment because Patton was “predisposed to commit a violation.

“Patton took an ordinary, albeit frequent and common, opportunity to illegally distribute a controlled substance on July 12, 2012; thus he was predisposed to commit the crime. Patton has distributed controlled substances over a seven-year period out of Medicap Pharmacy to various women in an attempt to gain sexual favors, even going as far as allowing the CS the keys to the pharmacy for several hours. As usual, Patton received a phone call from the CS, met her outside the Elk’s Lodge bar and then went with the CS to the pharmacy to provide her with pills. There was nothing out of the ordinary compared to their previous transactions. It was the same opportunity to distribute pills that Patton had taken advantage of repeatedly over a seven year period.

“Patton sought sexual favors in return for the pills. While the CS never gave him any money, she provided him an opportunity for sexual conduct. Despite the CS’s history of breaking those promises, he provided pills hoping that she would fulfill her promises. It is also worth noting that the CS never threatened Patton with harm or coercion if he failed to provide the pills.

“Patton was not reluctant to distribute pills. While Patton did say ‘no’ prior to giving the CS pills, this was part of the normal routine. The transaction took place exactly as the CS indicated it would when she met with DEA agents three days prior. Patton only verbally refused to provide pills in hope of receiving a sexual favor prior to the distribution, as evidenced by pulling out his penis around the time the pills were provided. If Patton was not predisposed to commit the crime he would not have driven to the pharmacy or agreed to meet with the CS. It is highly unlikely that Patton did not know what the CS’s motive was to meet up on July 12, 2012. If he truly was reluctant to provide her with pills, he would not have agreed to see her. The pattern of activity over multiple years clearly establishes that Patton was predisposed to committing the offense.

“Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, it is clear that Patton was not entrapped. Repeatedly providing the CS and other girls with pills over a seven-year period proves that he was predisposed on July 12, 2012. Thus, this Court should not answer a question that is for the jury to decide and deny Patton’s motion to dismiss the indictment.”

Quick response on Patton’s part

Citing case law, the government also argued that the video, while a poor quality, should be allowed in as evidence.

“The video recording from July 12, 2012 is a recording of the transaction for controlled substances that occurred between Patton and the CS,” the government stated. “While the video isn’t high definition quality, the audio clearly depicts an accurate record of the transaction. The dark setting of the video only reflects the time of the day in which the transaction occurred. It is highly unlikely that a video shot at night is so ‘suggestive of misconduct’ because of the darkness that it could suggest to jurors, on an emotional basis, that Patton is guilty.

“This video does not confuse the issues or have any remote chance of misleading the jury. There is no additional content other than the transaction on the video. The video is highly relevant because it captures the transaction that Patton is charged with.”

With the government’s response filed Oct. 29, Patton withdrew his not guilty plea on November 20.

After a little bit of wrangling about a presentence investigation report, on April 1 of this year, Patton was placed on a term of probation for three years as to the single-count indictment. He was fined $3,000 and a special assessment fee of $100. The judgment was signed off by Judge J. Phil Gilbert on April 7 and announced to the public on that day.

McGhee only just got off her probationary period: March 23, 2015; she still owes $2,303.02 in fines and fees, having already applied $2,740 (likely bond money) to the more than $5,000 assessed against her as part of her sentence.

The outrage many in Saline County feel over the entire matter, and the fact that Patton seems to have gotten off lightly, might be tempered with the possibility that, given what Patton was facing if he didn’t enter a plea, he likely coughed up enough names of pill abusers to make it worth the feds’ while.

Patton currently lives in Marion. There has been no specific information issued regarding what he’s now doing with his time, other than looking for unattractive women through online dating services.

Medicap Pharmacy in Harrisburg recovered from the big raid conducted in late July 2012; the Patton’s marriage, however, did not. Linda Patton, a pharmacist herself, ended up with the place in a restructuring of the corporation (conducted by their corporate attorney, Robert Wilson, who was on the premises July 31, 2012 when agents of all sorts were poring over pharmacy records), and promptly got divorced thereafter.

Medicap Pharmacy in Harrisburg recovered from the big raid conducted in late July 2012; the Patton’s marriage, however, did not. Linda Patton, a pharmacist herself, ended up with the place in a restructuring of the corporation (conducted by their corporate attorney, Robert Wilson, who was on the premises July 31, 2012 when agents of all sorts were poring over pharmacy records), and promptly got divorced thereafter.

Indictments handed down in Anna Bixby fraud case

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Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.07.57 PMSALINE CO.—Months of a grand jury investigation, seated in Saline County by Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s office, ultimately lead to indictments being handed down on Monday, March 30, to directors of Harrisburg’s Anna Bixby Women’s Center.

The grand jury returned true bills of indictment against ABC executive director Barbara Wingo, 76, of Golconda, and her daughter, assistant director Terrie Eichorn, 50, of Elizabethtown, after months of investigating evidence that revealed alleged misappropriation of funds, both official (obtained through state resources for the not-for-profit agency) and charitable donations.

The extent of the alleged crimes cannot be understated: Wingo is charged with very serious Class X “Organizer of a Continuing Financial Crimes Enterprise,” the kind of crimes that mob bosses engage in and which end their “organized crime” careers when caught.

Add in the other felonies ranging from Classes 1 to 3, as well as those Eichorn is charged with (also Classes 1 to 3), and the entire mess has apparently devolved from what was a good idea in 1979 to an alleged hotbed of corruption and theft of tax and charity dollars, goods and services.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.08.17 PMThe questionable OP

Sources advised Disclosure in the latter part of 2013 that the women’s center was under scrutiny at the time due to a spurious situation involving a relative of an employee of Anna Bixby Women’s Center (henceforth referred to as ABC) and an order of protection.

The employee was Angie Oxford; her daughter-in-law, Brittany Oxford (also known as Brittany Martin), was also an employee of ABC.

However, Brittany had taken up with area criminal Richard Cooper in Harrisburg, and Cooper was allegedly beating not only Brittany, but the two young children of Brittany and Blake Oxford, ages approximate 3 and 7.

As it turned out, ABC allowed Brittany and her children use of one of the rental “safe houses” in the area where rent was paid by ABC for victims of domestic violence. This was apparently in violation of the way it was supposed to be run at ABC.

Further, Brittany allowed Cooper to come and stay in the rent-free “safe house”…and ABC also picked up the tab for Brittany’s attorney in her legal action (Rhonda Blades) when Angie Oxford’s son/Brittany’s husband, Blake, obtained an OP and got the kids away from the allegedly-brutalizing Cooper.

Angie Oxford was reportedly fired over the matter when Blake got the OP, for “misuse of information” (ostensibly about Brittany’s and Cooper’s whereabouts with the kids), although Angie Oxford in actuality hadn’t misused any information; the OP was legitimately obtained and children legally removed from a bad situation by their father without input from their grandmother by way of ABC.

But from that point forward, some official eyes were on ABC…and unfortunately for the agency, there were plenty of people ready to talk.

Investigation begins; picking at financials

The investigation began at that point, with various entities picking away at the financials as they could obtain information about them.

Disclosure learned about the seating of the grand jury in Saline County by the Attorney General’s office this past November, coming on the heels of the very quiet, formal announcement at ABC that they were under investigation, this on October 6, 2014.

On that date, investigators from Lisa Madigan’s office arrived at the suite of offices located on Shaw Street across from Harrisburg City Park with a 20-foot moving and storage van. They bore with them signed search warrants which sought records, specifically those that may have been falsified during ABC operations. These agents entered the offices and requested everyone step away from their desks, hand over their cell phones, and consent to the investigation. Most of the offices’ pertinent materials or operations were confiscated and loaded up, including all documents and computers, although no one was taken into custody.

Wingo and Eichorn weren’t present when the “raid” was taking place, but somehow, someone at ABC was able to get in touch with them and the two arrived later in the day.

Court paperwork on file notes in black and white what Disclosure was told last November and which was published in the December 2014 edition: “ABWC employees have also stated to investigators that after the Office of Attorney General executed its search warrants, (Barb Wingo) held a meeting with ABWC employees, made them sign confidentiality paperwork and threatened to prosecute anyone who spoke to investigators and stated that after she was indicted, she would know who spoke. Witnesses also stated that (Wingo) told the ABWC employees that ‘they all know [the falsification of records] did not happen;’ that (Wingo) further stated ‘they don’t know what would happen to them between now and court;’ with another witness stating that (Wingo) told her that ‘I don’t care if I’m 90 when I get out, I will get you.’”

Whether that will happen with the 76-year-old Wingo remains to be seen; but what is known at this point is that the AG’s office “got” her…on some substantial allegations.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.08.47 PM

More of the exterior view of the Anna Bixby Women’s Center in early April, about two weeks after the indictments were announced. The bicycle decorated in purple, Disclosure was told, was done so in support of those dedicated to preventing domestic violence, as purple is supposed to be that kind of signature “color” for the cause. The rest of the place looked to be in some sort of run-down disarray, perhaps refl ective of the amount of money NOT put forth toward maintenance, upkeep…and assistance for those they were charged with helping.

AG’s assessment

Court documents show that the AG’s office discovered alleged misappropriation of somewhat phenomenal proportions for the 36-year-old agency to have participated in over the last several years.

Unfortunately, because these are only state charges (as opposed to federal), the time period covered as regards the charges could only go back three years.

The Attorney General’s office summarized the situation in this way:

Wingo is the Executive Director of the non-profit domestic violence shelter Anna Bixby Women’s Center (ABWC). She created the ABWD nearly 30 years ago (this is the AG’s material, and thus the “30 years” remark is off by a little bit; the place was founded in 1979—ed.) and has always been its Executive Director. She also created the non-profit Bixby Foundation and an ABWC-affiliated for-profit I. Downey, Inc., that operated hair salons in Harrisburg. In a June 30, 2013 filing with the Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG’s) Charitable Trust Bureau, the ABWC reported that it received $1,048,348.00 in grants from various State and Federal agencies.

In August 2014, the OAG received information that Wingo fired an ABWC employee at the end of July 2014 because the employee refused Wingo’s orders to falsify domestic violence client files that were to be submitted to the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (“Authority”) via its “Infonet” server. The OAG also received information that Wingo was using ABWC charitable assets for her personal benefit.

Services for a horse

In October 2014, the OAG executed two search warrants of the ABWC, interviewed employees and issued Grand Jury subpoenas for the bank records of the ABWC, the Bixby Foundation and I. Downey, Inc. Interviews with ABWC employees revealed that Wingo asked ABWC employees to falsify client records that were ultimately submitted to the Authority.

Employees stated that Wingo ordered employees to falsify client files on other instances prior to July 2014.

The OAG identified an alleged falsified file created in November 2013 which stated that the ABWC provided counseling services to a client named “Rush Cowboy.” OAG investigators discovered that this was the name of a horse owned by Wingo’s daughter (Eichorn).

An ABWC employee stated that Wingo ordered her to create this file and another false file using the name “Brenda Owen” so that an ABWC employee could live in a federally-funded house that she was not eligible for.

As it turned out, “Brenda Owen,” Disclosure learned, was the cover name for Brittany Oxford.

Alleges fraudulent files, bedbugs

The document goes on to state:

The OAG was also able to identify actual domestic violence victims for which alleged falsified files were created in their file. Six domestic violence victims stated that forms in their file which stated that they or their children received counseling services were false.

One victim had service contact hours for counseling services for her child in April 2014.

This victim told OAG investigators that she sough emergency shelter from the ABWC in November 2013 and was placed in an apartment by the ABWC.

She stated that the apartment had bedbugs and when she notified Wingo about the bugs, Wingo did nothing so the victim left the apartment with her kids in January 2014 and never returned to the ABWC.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.09.04 PM

At right is Barbara Wingo’s mugshot taken at Saline County Detention Center Monday, March 30. Bond was posted in the amount of $50,000 cash for her release pending next hearing

The scurrilous hair places

An investigation into the operations of the ABWC, Bixby Foundation and I. Downey also revealed a loan application to Legence Bank in April 2014 whereby Wingo made representation to Legence Bank in order to obtain a $100,000.00 loan for a business named Salon 716 that is operated by I. Downey.

Paperwork for the loan stated that I. Downey received business profits from another salon that it previously operated named Hair Care and donated the money to the Bixby Foundation which, in turn, donated the money to the ABWC for the benefit of domestic violence victims.

A review of relevant bank accounts reveals that this is not true. Bank records reveal that from 2011 through 2014, the ABWC helped fund I. Downey and its salons as well as pay portions of its credit cards and other bills. No money was donated to the ABWC or Bixby Foundation from I. Downey or Hair Care throughout this period.

Wingo also did not disclose to Legence Bank that Hair Care was delinquent in its last eleven months of rent when applying for the loan. Based on the false information provided, Legence Bank approves a $100,000 loan to help fund Salon 716.

A review of ABWC credit cards, checking accounts and witness statements also reveal that Wingo had been using charitable assets for her personal benefit since at least 2012.

Wingo’s charges

After having met for an as-yet-unknown number of months, the Saline County Grand Jury, lead by Assistant Attorney General Jonas J. Harger (grand juries involve only a prosecutor and the jury, which is used as an investigative tool; there is no judge involved, and witnesses are brought in to testify under oath to the jury) returned the following true bills of indictment (charges) against Wingo:

Forgery, a Class 3 felony, wherein it’s alleged that with intent to defraud, she made a false document or altered a document to make it false on or about November 12, 2013. This document pertained to Brittany Oxford, an employee of ABC, who received permission from Wingo to live in a federally-funded house for which she didn’t qualify. Wingo, the charge alleged, used her position of authority to order an ABC employee to create a file for a fictitious client names “Brenda Owen” so that Oxford could live in the federally funded house and the file was apparently capable of defrauding another.

A second count of Class 3 felony Forgery, in that Wingo as executive director of ABC, on or about July 20, 2014 and continuing through on or about August 15, 2014, used her position of authority to order ABC employees to create false service contact hours in ABC’s files and those forms were apparently capable of defrauding the State of Illinois.

A third count of Class 3 felony Forgery, in that on or about the same time period, Wingo used her position of authority to order ABC employees to make false service contact forms and those forms were apparently capable of defrauding the State of Illinois, and then ordered those false documents to be issued or delivered to the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority via its “Infonet” server.

A Class 3 felony Wire Fraud count covering the same July 20-Aug. 15, 2014, time period, wherein Wingo devised a scheme or artifice to obtain money or property by means of false pretenses, representations, or promises to wit: by creating the false service contact forms, ordering an ABC employee to submit them to Info net, she caused at least one of the many listed forms to be transmitted by means of wire communication within Saline County (each form is listed in documentation only by client ID numbers).

Alleged defrauding a bank

Count 5 is a Class 2 felony count of Loan Fraud, in which it’s alleged that Wingo, as ED of ABC and partner of or controlling I. Downey, Inc., in April of 2014, applied for a $100,000 loan from Legence Bank to fund the operation of a salon owned by I. Downey, Salon 716. But in the loan application process, Wingo submitted a “Flow Chart of Financial Support to Anna Bixby Women’s Center,” claiming it was “submitted by Wingo and the Bixby Board.” This “flow chart” stated that I. Downey, doing business as Hair Care, “received business profits that were donated to the Bixby Foundation, which were then donated to the ABC”…which statements were false. Nevertheless, Legence relied on these false statements and reports for consideration of the loan.

This lead to count 6, a Class 2 felony Financial Institution Fraud, wherein it was alleged that on or about March 1, 2014, and continuing through on or about April 30, 2014, Wingo, doing business as Salon 716 through the I. Downey corporation, seeking a loan to fund its operations, submitted the above-mentioned flow chart in order to defraud Legence. Legence relied on the false statements when determining to grant the $100,000 loan to I. Downey, Inc.

A second count of Class 2 felony Financial Institution Fraud alleges the same time period and the verbiage is only slightly different in that it states that Wingo submitted the flow chart knowing that it made false representations.

Count 8 delves into the very serious nature of the felonies, as it’s a Class 1 Continuing Financial Crimes Enterprise, in which it’s alleged that on or about March 1, 2014 and continuing through November 30, 2014, Wingo, as ED of the ABC, submitted the false statement (flow chart), Legence relied on it and gave her the loan, and pursuant to that loan, her business, I. Downey Inc., “exerted unauthorized control over the money” between April 2014 and November 30, 2014.

The ninth count, the Class X felony Organizer of a Continuing Financial Crimes Enterprise, alleges that on or about March 1, 2014 and continuing through Nov. 30, 2014, Wingo, on three or more separate occasions within an 18-month period, agreed with Amanda Pritchett, a person over which Wingo held a position of supervisor or other management, to create the “flow chart,” knowing the contents of it contained false statements. Then, via I. Downey, Wingo exerted unauthorized control over that loan money obtained via the false statements in the flow chart.

Finally, on the tenth count, another Class 2 felony is issued: Personal Use of Charitable Assets, in which it’s alleged that on or about August 21, 2012, Wingo used ABC’s credit cards and/or checks to purchase computers at Walmart, the value of which exceeded $1,000, for her own personal benefit or use. This is disallowed under Illinois law, which states that the “personal use” of such charitable trust funds must be limited to $1,000 within a 5-year period.

Wingo was arrested and booked at the Saline County Detention Center in Harrisburg on Monday, March 30, the day the grand jury returned their indictments.

Diane Taborn, an employee of ABC, posted $50,000 cash bond on the $500,000 bail.

There’s been no word of whether or not investigators are looking into where that fifty grand came from.

Service contact files for the horse

Wingo’s daughter, Terrie Eichorn, who has a substantial and very public drinking problem (which, it’s been stated by those who know her, might account for some of the alleged abuses of funds that both she and her mother engaged in), is charged with her own set of counts based on largely the same material information issued against Wingo.

The AG’s office outlined the same background for the basis of the charges against Eichorn as they did Wingo; where the paperwork diverged is where the horse “Rush Cowboy” came in, as that horse, of course, belonged to Eichorn.

“Service contact files were reported to the Authority in 2013 stating that the horse received counseling services from the ABWC,” the AG’s office wrote.

The documents mention the Salon 716 alleged fraud, wherein the representations to Legence Bank in order to obtain the loan were made.

“No money was donated to the ABWC or Bixby Foundation from I. Downey or Hair Care throughout this period,” the paperwork states. “Eichorn also did not disclose to Legence Bank that Hair Care was delinquent in its last eleven months of rent when applying for the loan. A witness stated that Eichorn ordered her not to disclose the fact that Hair Care did not pay its rent to Legence Bank. Based on the false information provided, Legence Bank approved a $100,000 loan to help fund Salon 716.

“A witness also stated that Eichorn ordered the witness to call Legence Bank several times to request a ‘draw down’ on the loan.”

It’s unclear from available paperwork whether the draw down was a transfer of funds regarding the loan, or a withdrawal from the loan fund in the form of cash or check.

Involved her errant kid

The court documents then bring in the allegations regarding the charitable funds…as well as the involvement of Eichorn’s only son, Kyle Wayne, whom regular readers will recall nearly killed himself last November following a serious car crash; it’s been alleged that he had every form of illicit substance in his then-18-year-old system.

A review of ABWC credit cards, checking accounts and witness statements also reveal that Eichorn had been using charitable assets for her personal benefit since at least 2012, court records read.

“Witnesses stated that each year the Poshard Foundation for Abused Children donated approximately $3,000 each Christmas season for the benefit of abused children. Several witnesses have stated that Eichorn siphoned some of this money for her personal benefit.

“Witnesses have stated that when Eichorn misappropriated this money, she would order ABWC employees to submit their personal receipts in order to fraudulently account for the missing money,” the paperwork indicates by way of explanation. “A review of receipts submitted to the Poshard Foundations to account for the donated money reveals receipts for items not related to gifts for children at Christmas. For example, a receipt was submitted that detailed the purchase of a spotlight, trailer hitch and wiring kit. Witnesses have stated that Eichorn purchased these items for her son.”

As if to add to the outrage of the entire debacle, on the day the indictments were handed down, Eichorn, her husband Wayne, their son Kyle and his female du jour, Madison Hirsch (victim of a beatdown last year provided by Alyce Williams at Hardin County High School), were on a deep sea fishing trip in Florida.

She was served with the indictments upon return, however, and posted bond on April 6.

Court files indicate that the bond was $50,000, just like her mother’s was.

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.09.12 PMEichorn charges

Eichorn’s first count is a Class 3 felony Forgery, in which it’s alleged that she, as Assistant Director at ABC, used her position of authority on or about July 20, 2014 and continuing through on or about August 15, 2014, to create false service contact hours in clients’ files, which were apparently capable of defrauding the state.

Count 2 is another Class 3 felony Forgery, alleging the same as Count 1, but adding that Eichorn then ordered the false documents to be issued or delivered to the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority via its “Infonet” server.

Count 3 is a Class 3 felony Wire Fraud, which alleges the same as Wingo’s, including the same dates and the same allegedly fraudulent services contact form with fake information on each, transmitted by means of wire communication.

The fourth count is a Class 2 felony Loan Fraud, as it pertains to the same loan fraud that’s alleged against Wingo with the falsified “flow chart” of financial support ot ANC coming from I. Downey doing business as Hair Care. A second count of Class 2 felony Loan Fraud, alleging the same as Wingo’s, is Count 5.

Financial Institution Fraud is the sixth count, as alleged to have occurred on or about March 1 through on or about April 30, 2014, as it pertains the flow chart and false reports to obtain a loan from Legence. A second count of Financial Institution Fraud is count 7; it too is a Class 2 felony.

Eichorn, like Wingo, is also charged with count 8, a Class 1 felony Continuing Financial Crimes Enterprise pertaining to the loan from Legence as well as operating and exerting unauthorized control over that money on more than two occasions between April and November 2014. 

Eichorn’s charge of Personal Use of Charitable Assets, count 9, a Class 2 felony, is similar to Wingo’s but specifies that Eichorn is alleged to have used ABC’s credit cards and checks to purchase computers, a 32 inch LCD television with a Nintendo Wii, and other items for her personal benefit or personal use. It also alleges that in Decmeber 2013, Eichorn had access to money donated to the ABC by the Glen Poshard Foundation for the benefit of abused children during Christmas, and that she used portions of that for her personal benefit or use.

Pritchett

Both Wingo and Eichorn were set for an April 27 first appearance.

Pritchett, as mentioned under Wingo’s indictments, was also charged as part of the grand jury investigation.

An indictment returned on the same day as Wingo’s and Eichorn’s shows a count of Theft in excess of $10,000 but less than $100,000, having been conducted between May 24, 2013 and September 15, 2014.

During that period of time, the grand jury found, Wingo had reported to Harrisburg Police that Pritchett was receiving unauthorized extra payroll checks. While there had not been any “discussions regarding extra or bonus payments to any ABC employees…and the board did not authorize the extra payments to Pritchett,” who was the bookkeeper for ABC, sources indicate that each of the checks had two signatures, as required for issuance to ABC employees.

Because of this, and because Wingo had A—already involved Pritchett in the alleged falsification of records, and B—already was aware that there was an investigation of some sort going on with her agency, it remains unclear whether the $33,191.33-plus in checks that Pritchett cashed were legit or not…and if they were legit, how Pritchett come to be charged with such a serious felony in light of the entire investigation.

Whatever the case, by the date of the indictment, she had already made full restitution, and was placed on the Offender Initiative Program/Intensive Probation for 12 months under a plea agreement.

It’s unclear whether this agreement means telling investigators what she knows about Wingo’s and Eichorn’s activities within the agency.

Who else might be involved…and who else might have been helped…?

However, so many people have known for so long that something spurious has been going on with ABC, it’s kind of a given that it’d be hard to tell who is or isn’t talking.

It was open knowledge that Wayne Eichorn, who is already on the taxpayer teat with a job through Hardin County’s Highway Department and is a former county commissioner in Hardin, was using an ABC van as a personal vehicle—and probably writing off the gas put into it—until October 6, 2014, when he was told to park it at the center, where it still sits.

Sources have advised that little Kyle Eichorn’s popularity among the very young crowd in Hardin, Pope and Saline counties, is fully explicable: He’s allowed to party at San Damiano resort, which happens to be one of the “safe house” locations for ABC to put up abused women and children. Sam Damiano simply issues an invoice to ABC, sources said, and ABC cuts them a check. That they’re doing this for the younger Eichorn’s festivities is a very good likelihood, the sources advised, and it’s possible that he could be the next to be investigated. Other Eichorn/Wingo relatives are also being eyed, according to the source providing information for this article.

Despite the very serious charges, Wingo and Eichorn continue on with their lives as though nothing has happened; and others around them seem oblivious to it as well, much the same as the populace rallied around Kyle when he had his DUI accident in Saline in late November, willing to overlook the criminality of it all.

However, criminality among those who are entrusted with tax dollars as well as charitable donations should never just be blown off; in so doing, the populace emboldens the next entity or individual who does the same, thus running up the tax burden for everyone. And when it comes to an agency that’s supposed to be supporting the most vulnerable of society—abused women and children—those who are willing to give the corrupt a pass must ask themselves how many more women and children could have been helped with the amounts of money used in a fraudulent or corrupt way…and how many weren’t because of that corruption.


THIS MONTH’S PRINT HEADLINES, APRIL-MAY 2015!

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The April-May 2015 edition of Disclosure, with our thirteenth year of publication well underway, has hit the stands throughout southern Illinois, and once again, you are going to be amazed at what we have in store for you in this one!

If you think reading the free side of the website gets you all the news, think again…it’s all different material when it comes to the print product and e-Edition, because the free side of the site is there for breaking news; the paper and e-Edition are for the details no other newspaper, website or media outlet can or will give you. And this issue is FULL of that kind of material. Some of it will probably leave you gasping. Hopefully, most of it will outrage you, and maybe, just maybe (we’re always hoping), it’ll spur you to seek out and ask for change: in the way things are handled by our law enforcement, our court systems, our politics. Because the only people who can bring about meaningful change are THE PEOPLE…and with voter turnout in local elections barely rising out of the upper teens in percentages during the last election…well, we’re gonna have to do better.

Print headlines are provided every issue so you can see what we have in store for you, and so that if you have an online membership to the e-Edition, you can click the link and go right to the story, thus making reading each issue easy for you and almost custom made. Each print headline is preceded by the dateline (the location in the coverage area where the article takes place) and is followed by a brief synopsis, often in our own snarky Disclosure style. The headlines are split up by sections in the paper, starting with the front page, then back page (second front page), pages 2 and 3, features if there are any, then Egypt, Heartland, Central and Op-Ed.

Now, without further ado, we bring you THIS MONTH’S PRINT HEADLINES!

PAGE 1

Darren Frank, in a 2010 mug from Clay County

Darren Frank, in a 2010 mug from Clay County

CLAY CO.—DEATH UNSOLVED: The death of rural Clay County woman Amber Mahon still has Clay residents on edge. What happened in the moments leading up to the incident when she fell, jumped or was pushed out of the vehicle she was on on March 27? Whose vehicle was it? What was going on in the months before that? We have the answers to all of it. And if you’re worried about this case languishing, you have good reason. Give it a read.

It's a purple bike, purple being the "color" for victims of domestic abuse, as it sits outside Anna Bixby Center in Harrisburg

It's a purple bike, purple being the "color" for victims of domestic abuse, as it sits outside Anna Bixby Center in Harrisburg

SALINE CO.—Indictments handed down in Anna Bixby fraud case: So you thought you knew all about the sitch at Anna Bixby in Harrisburg by listening to the talking heads tell you about it? Hahah...wait til you read this. And believe us when we tell you...there's more to come. Much, much more.

Former Hamilton County coach/teacher Jeff Gray

Former Hamilton County coach/teacher Jeff Gray

HAMILTON CO.---Allegations of coach's inappropriate conduct: You may already have read that there's been a resolution to the situation in McLeansboro with Coach Jeff Gray at the high school. We'll keep you posted if there are any changes at all with the matter...in the meantime, read this article!

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 11.51.54 AMWAYNE-WHITE COs.---Federal charges against former co-op CFO: So, lemme ask my fellow Wayne-White Counties Electric Cooperative customers, as well as those who use Ameren Illinois (which is what we have at the Harrisburg location): Are your electric bills at WWCEC twice what everybody else is paying, and in some instances, three times what others pay? Ever wonder why? Maybe, just maybe, THIS is why.

LAWRENCE CO.---Charge dismissed in "stabbing": We have quotations around the word stabbing because while there WAS one, apparently is wasn't what we were told it was. And so, true to our form, we're bringing you the follow up to an incident nearly two years old...because when people are cleared of charges, that's news, too.

BACK PAGE

From Steve Patton's "plentyoffish" page. It's plenty offish, alright...wait'll you read the coverage

From Steve Patton's "plentyoffish" page. It's plenty offish, alright...wait'll you read the coverage

SALINE CO.---So much for the black book of secrets: Steve Patton now a felon on single-count charge: I reiterate what I said about the Anna Bixby debacle: You think you heard it all from the talking heads telling you about it? Think again. This is a much, MUCH bigger story than the local media is willing to concede...and we have it all, because we've been there with it from the beginning.

RICHLAND CO.---Violence fills Richland court docket: We have quite a bit of violence in Richland County as a rule...but this issue, we have some interesting mugshots to go with it, hence the reason this particular piece of court coverage made the back page.

PAGE 2

CENTRAL COUNTIES---Low voter turnout and many tie votes plague central counties this election: Post-election coverage for our core counties, since we were able to give such good website coverage of the south and north counties in the coverage area on election night; Central kinda got overlooked. We make up for that here.

JASPER CO.---Fleeing and DUIs keep Jasper cops busy: One of the few Jasper County pieces we got, too good to stick back in the Heartland section, so we ran it on Page 2.

EGYPT

You can't make this stuff up....

You can't make this stuff up....

SALINE CO.---Darwin award candidates arrested after getting truck stuck during burglary: There are few crims in Saline dumber than Matt Ozment. See what this mental midget is up to this time...you gotta read it to believe it.

SALINE CO.---Time-honored question of why a person would drive on suspended license with drugs in car unanswered: I think the headline says it all. I guess you have to be on dope to understand the actions of people who are.

SALINE CO.---'rado man charged with head-butting wife: Some of the violence report out of Saline County.

HARDIN CO.---Prosecutor withholds sex offender's address: Lil Tara messing up again; and, you'd think that Butter McGhee somehow knew she was going to be a prominent fixture in this issue, so she ensured that her weird-looking kid had plenty of pics available on his Facebook page....

GALLATIN CO.---EOP alleged mother smoking dope with kid--Two year plenary order entered in case: You gotta wonder about people who apparently hope to endear themselves to their kids by encouraging them to take a hit off the J every once in awhile with em....

SALINE CO.---Charged with yanking wife around the yard by her hair; Mills man charged with animal cruelty: More Saline County violence; one story not to be confused with the other.

GALLATIN CO.---Mixed bag of charges filed in Gallatin: Yeah, when we say mixed bag in this case, we mean mixed bag. There's just no categorizing it.

HEARTLAND

Joseph Scott, Crawford County Sheriff's Office mug

Joseph Scott, Crawford County Sheriff's Office mug

CRAWFORD CO.---Will prosecutor actually get around to doing anything about this sex offender? We, along with many other people, are wondering what the heck has happened to Matt Hartrich, State's Attorney in Crawford County. It's like he's stopped caring or something. And a sex offender is not something you want him to just up and stop caring about.

COLES CO.---Yes, Zone 5 investigations confirmed there was something being investigated at Sun Elite in Charleston: The brief, literally, that we put up just after release of the previous issue, and the ridiculous crap we got for it. We're not going to concoct something like this. We called two whole law enforcement agencies to confirm; they confirmed; and that's all you need to know. Don't have the friggin TV station calling us about it. Tend to it yourself.

CRAWFORD CO.---Huffing suspect found passed out, drooling: It intrigues me the kind of person it takes to think "Oh, I'll spray the contents of this canned air into something and take a big whiff and then lose consciousness and drool and maybe die!!" is a good idea. And yet, here we are...

CRAWFORD/JASPER/CLARK COs.---Election in the Heartland: Not a lot of contests, but some welcome faces in some areas: The rest of Heartland election coverage, the extent of which we only got Clark County on election night. Pitiful turnout everywhere made it so that even the reporting agencies weren't as excited about the election as they ordinarily are...leading to late totals for us.

COLES CO.---Ashmore woman sentenced for stealing concession stand cash: You know, we never find out what kind of impetus is behind these thefts. Who steals from kids/kid's programs?? Dang, girl.

CRAWFORD CO.---Charges against Oblong woman continue to mount: THIS chick Kristi Tremaine, might have a perky mugshot and all...but this OP thing with her is an ongoing one. See what she's up to now, in this article which is a basic crim roundup for Crawford as well.

CENTRAL

From Buck Windle's Facebook page. Now I'm asking you...do either one of these dweebs look gangsta?

From Buck Windle's Facebook page. Now I'm asking you...do either one of these dweebs look gangsta? Because THEY think they do....

CLAY CO.---Xenia man and former victim both charged: Hilarity has ensued over "Buck" Windle's Facebook rants...and apparently that's all he's got, because this is one babyfaced lil punk, I'm here to tell ya. Read what happened that had everybody in Clay County screencapping a few weeks ago.

WHITE CO.--Meth convicts at center of stolen cell phone case: The White County crim report, which just gets more and more interesting every month.

WHITE CO. ---Prison inmate charge with burglary, theft: Nothing like going to DOC, THEN getting charged with a very serious crime while you're sitting there. Only in White County...

WABASH CO.--Wabash thefts include cash from Beuhler's and ExMark lawnmowers: Really. If dude were gonna start a lawn mowing service, he can start it without allegedly stealing mowers first....right?

LAWRENCE CO.---Burglar charged with dope: It was a slow month in Lawrence County this past one, but as of today, it seems like everybody's making up for it. We'll have more on that; in the interim, here's this month's crim report.

RICHLAND CO.---Leaf collection filling Richland court docket: Remember The Leaf Boyz, and the confusion over Zac Leaf and Tyler Leaf last year that created this inanity? well, they're back. No confusion this time.

WABASH CO.---Woman assaulted in her home at knife-point: Just when Wabash County got rid of one menace, along comes another. See who it is and what everybody's up to in this article.

EDWARDS CO.---Doper leads trio of Grayville residents charged: Long before there was the big to-do with Grayville and the officer-involved shooting, this kinda stuff featured in this article was going on. And will go on long after Johnny Eagleson is back in DOC, I'd wager.

WHITE CO.---White man charged with attacking three family members: Have I mentioned that there seems to be an excessive amount of crime coming out of White County this month...?

WABASH CO.--Violent sex predator caught lying on registration form: Don't EVEN give me any crap about the lead on this story. I've had it up to the eyeballs with people who hurt kids; I'm sick of it and they're gonna get called what they are....which is what's the lead of this story.

WABASH CO.---Mt. Carmel, Albion men face meth and alcohol charges: More alleged crim activity coming out of Wabash County.

LAWRENCE CO.---L'ville felon charged with having weapons: This one's an oddity. Not your typical felon in possession of a weapons charge.

LAWRENCE CO.---Noble man sentenced, his victim gets charged: Not a lot of crossover this issue, but here's one that does in deed have it: Lawrence to Richland and back again.

CLAY CO.---Louisville man charged with having sex with 15-year-old: Seems that ever since Mychal Bush-King got his butt in a sling on allegations of having sex with underage girls, it's been a kind of a trend there in Clay. Here's the third such guy in about two months being charged for that particular crime.

OP-ED

SURLY & UNCOOPERATIVE (Jack): Minion and a fish named Crunchy Blueberry...
ICY (Ang): News is harsh...and some just don't get it
MINKUS INK (Bubba): Seizure laws, jury nullification and other items

LETTERS: Letter-writer addresses Muslims

BACK OVER YOUR TALES: Deputy JD Robinson charged in Richland County; prospective Ridgway cop hemmed up in Carrier Mills; fire in Clay County leaves family of Charlie Chase worried; Ricky Turner is arrested in the 2009 death of Jessika James; Max Schauf dumps city workers; violent White County sex offender still out; huge theft ring busted in Richland County; two beat each other up in Saline County Detention Center; a Carmi man gets IDOC time after entering a plea to sex crimes; two guys beat up Brian James O'Neill; Kyle Gosnell of Lawrenceville is sentenced in Richland; the former village clerk of Geff is jailed; Tim Monroe is released from his jail stay; a Clay County resident is busted for child porn in Alabama; a big throw down at Cecil Gulley's house landed the usual suspects in jail in Harrisburg; the Fentanyl Five in Hardin County make court appearances; George Darrell Sargent is charged with a sex crime against an elderly woman; and Lawrence County deputy Josh Green is suspended after he beats up his girlfriend's brother.

That's it...it's a killer issue, and we're not just saying that...go get one or hit any of the links to see a story if you're an online member, or to become one, hit any of the links or THIS LINK RIGHT HERE to sign up...only $2.99 for a 24-hour pass; $5.99 for a full month's access...follow the prompts CAREFULLY...and you're onnit!!

STABBING IN ELDORADO; ONE IN CUSTODY

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stabbing2

ELDORADO, Ill.---We've learned of a stabbing that occurred in Eldorado, reportedly earlier this afternoon.

The victim is reportedly a female, and the incident reportedly occurred in an apartment complex, possibly one of the housing projects.

Two sources have advised us that a black male subject is in custody at this time. One source has reported that the victim has died; however, the second source has yet to confirm this.

Information is very preliminary at this point, so it's sketchy. When we learn more, we'll bring it.

FATALITY IN ELDORADO AFTER STABBING INCIDENT

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stabbing-no-death

SALINE CO., Ill.---Officials have confirmed that the stabbing incident that occurred in housing in Eldorado has resulted in a fatality.

Our sources in Saline County have confirmed that the state's attorney's office is now involved and that office is seeking a search warrant.

While we have names, we are withholding them at this point, except to state that earlier confusion in getting the information to the site had the suspect in custody as a black male. We are now understanding that his last NAME is "Black." Whether he's a black male or not remains unknown at this time.

The deceased is a woman. It's being reported to us that she was pregnant and that the suspect is the father of other children of hers.

The incident is said to have occurred at around 2 p.m. today at an apartment at the housing projects on Main Street in Eldorado. An exact address has not been given to us at this time. The address of that particular project is 1900 North Main Street.

More as we get it; keep checking back.

VEHICLE BEING PULLED FROM ONE HORSE GAP LAKE

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One Horse Gap Lake; the Pope County side is to the northwest

One Horse Gap Lake; the Pope County side is to the northwest

UPDATE 11:35 p.m.

One vehicle is out and is confirmed to NOT be the SUV Kyle Brown was driving when he disappeared.

Original post appears below.

POPE CO., Ill.---Authorities at this hour have pulled a vehicle from the Pope County side of One Horse Gap Lake.

Our sources are advising that this is a dark SUV fitting the description of the one that missing man Kyle Brown from Harrisburg.

We have NOT been told that this IS the vehicle belonging to Brown, nor that there is a body in it.

However, sources at the lake at this hour are confirming that Pope County and other authorities are at the lake with a dive team, possibly from Illinois State Police, working at getting the vehicle up...and that they're blocking traffic to the lake.

Info coming in as we were preparing this post indicates that there may POSSIBLY be another vehicle in the lake at that location. This has NOT been confirmed, but these are highly reliable sources we're in contact with.

Please check back as this information is subject to change.

Another view of One Horse Gap Lake area, according to terrain view.

Another view of One Horse Gap Lake area, according to terrain view.

 

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MISSING MAN KYLE BROWN HAS BEEN FOUND

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From Kyle Brown's Facebook page

From Kyle Brown's Facebook page

POPE CO., Ill.---Despite official reports at the scene at about 11:30 last night saying that the first vehicle pulled from One Horse Gap Lake was not Kyle Brown's, it turns out that ONE of the two submerged WAS.

And Kyle Brown's body was indeed found in one of the vehicles.

Sonar was being used on bodies of water yesterday (Friday, April 17), in the area where the search for missing Harrisburg man Kyle Brown was ongoing (Hardin and Pope counties). At One Horse Gap Lake, there was a ping, and ISP was requested to respond and direct a dive team.

Very late last night, reports came in that people wishing to visit the boat ramp and other public accesses of the lake were turned away by state troopers due to the search.

Our sources contacted those present and they confirmed that this might be Brown's vehicle. However...they also reported that there were TWO vehicles submerged in the lake, not just one.

One of those vehicles was pulled to shore at around 11 p.m. Our sources on scene were told this one was not Brown's, despite it being a dark SUV fitting the description of the one he had last been seen driving in late December 2014.

Joel Moore

Joel Moore

Apparently, Browns's body WAS in one of the vehicles, as our sources confirmed very early this morning (at about 1 a.m. if we're reading our messages right) that one of the vehicles pulled from the water had his body in it. We have NOT been told which one. We have NOT been told that there is another body. We HAVE been told, late last night, that there was "another man missing from Shawneetown that authorities are aware of." We do NOT know who this would be; there hasn't been a report of anyone from Shawneetown missing that we know of. For all we know, it could be a VERY old case. We have NOT been told that it is missing man Joel Moore. That's not to say that it isn't...it's only to say that we've NOT been TOLD that.

We are awaiting updates by way of return phone calls from officials in the area. When we get those, we will update in a separate post. Keep checking back.

 

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PERSON OF INTEREST IN CUSTODY IN ELDORADO STABBING; VICTIM’S PREGNANCY CONFIRMED

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LaTisha Reidelberger, from her Facebook page

LaTisha Reidelberger, from her Facebook page

SALINE CO., Ill.---A man identified by authorities only as a "56-year-old male" is currently in Saline County custody as a person of interest in the stabbing death of a woman in Eldorado yesterday.

The man is currently being questioned by Illinois State Police investigators in the death of LaTisha Reidelberger, 28, who was stabbed at her apartment in housing located at 1900 Main Street, Eldorado, this occurring at around 1:30 yesterday, Friday, April 17.

LaTisha Reidelberger was pregnant but with only ONE baby, not twins

LaTisha Reidelberger was pregnant but with only ONE baby, not twins

Authorities have confirmed that Reidelberger was a few months pregnant (we've not been told exactly how many). Contrary to assertions by friends, family and others who claimed to know her, she was NOT pregnant with twins, this according to an autopsy conducted today by Regional Pathologist John Heidingsfelder.

The fetus of course also died following the stabbing. There has been no word from officials as to whether the male person of interest will be charged with the death of the fetus or not.

There have been no charges filed at all in the matter, as the investigation is only in its preliminary stages. A search warrant for the apartment where the incident occurred was issued late yesterday afternoon, and the results have not been made public.

Witnesses at the scene have issued information to Disclosure in abundance, however.

They have, to a person, identified the male in question as the father of Reidelberger's children, ages not given as well as the number of children, who were present in the apartment when the incident occurred. An eyewitness to the situation stated that Reidelberger had been attempting to have an OP issued against the male, with no success. This witness then stated that Reidelberger was unaware that the male was actually in the apartment until it was too late. Witnesses advised that the stabbing was apparently very quick, and that Reidelberger's entire torso was "covered in blood," that the children observed it, and that they were screaming for the cops.

However, the cops were another issue.

According to the witnesses, the male "walked around the apartment and outside of it" for quite a period of time before any law enforcement arrived, this because apparently Eldorado had no one on duty, or at least no one who could respond. Our inquiries into the situation involving police chief Shannon Deuel turned up that Deuel just doesn't work much anymore; our investigation into court files as of late---since about last year when the two kids faked a kidnapping and absconded with a car, later to be caught in Missouri---bear this out. We just don't see his name on official reports any more. The fact that he whined to 'rado mayor Rocky James last August about the factual report on his screwup that lead to young crim Sonny Pilgrim being able to do what he did, and James subsequently pressuring a local vendor of ours to stop carrying the paper, also bears this out. There are problems in Eldorado with police. This instant case may not have occurred the way it did, were there not.

But occur it did. Witnesses tell us that ultimately, an officer arrived from Harrisburg, as well as other officers finally converging on the area where the 56-year-old male was "just walking around" at the housing projects after the stabbing. The male took off running at that point and was hit with a TASER, twice, before he was apprehended. He was taken to Saline County Detention Center and that's where he's being held as a person of interest in Reidelberger's death until authorities say otherwise.

The male has a significant criminal history in other states, we're being told, and is in fact a convicted in felon in Saline.

Authorities in Saline are officially saying now only that we'll know more Monday.

Please check back, as this matter is developing and new information is coming in all the time.

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NO FOUL PLAY INVOLVED IN KYLE BROWN’S DEATH

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From Kyle Brown's Facebook page

From Kyle Brown's Facebook page

POPE CO., Ill.---Authorities have positively identified the body of Kyle Brown, 19, of Harrisburg, as the one found in the second vehicle pulled from the Pope County side of One Horse Gap Lake late Friday night...and they've issued a declaration of "no foul play" involved in his death.

The Pope County Coroner's office conducted an autopsy this afternoon, where dental records confirmed Brown's identity.

Brown's mother Tina unofficially confirmed that the body found in the vehicle in the lake late Friday night was that of her son, as Saline County authorities were on-scene and advised Tina that items of clothing were consistent with the ones Brown had last been seen wearing in late December 2014 when he went missing.

Toxicology is pending, but as of this time, authorities have declared that no foul play was involved in Brown's death.

There's been no official word on cause of death.

More as we get it.

 


FORMAL CHARGES FILED IN ELDORADO STABBING: SEVERAL HOMICIDE COUNTS

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From Rodney Black's Facebook page

From Rodney Black's Facebook page

SALINE CO., Ill.---Rodney E. Black, 56, of Eldorado, was formally charged in Saline County Circuit Court today (April 20, 2015).

Black has been charged with three counts of First Degree Murder, a Class M felony, in the death of LaTisha Reidelberger, wherein it's accused that she was stabbed multiple times about the body with a knife, actions which caused her death. First Degree Murder is punishable by 20-69 years in Illinois Department of Corrections and three years mandatory supervised release.

Black has also been charged with three counts of Intentional Homicide of an Unborn Child, a Class M felony, as Reidelberger was pregnant. The "intentional" portion of this comes in in that Black knew Reidleberger was pregnant when he took the alleged actions he did. This homicide is also punishable by 20-60 years in DOC and 3 years MSR.

Black was arrested on Friday, April 17, 2015.

His bond has been set at a million dollars.

A copy of the formal charges and official news release on the situation can be found at this link.

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AUTHORITIES SEEKING TWO MALE SUSPECTS IN CARRIER MILLS HOME INVASION

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home invasion, crime scene

SALINE CO.— Carrier Mills and Saline County authorities are on the trail of a pair of men who are accused in a Thursday, April 16 Monday, April 20 (CORRECTED) home invasion.

According to police sources a male victim called 911 from his residence, located at 15 Victoria Ann Dr., Carrier Mills and reported that two men came into his house and made off with home electronics items before fleeing on foot.

“We’re still following up leads and may have a break in the case as early as tomorrow morning,” the source said.

Anyone with information about the incident on Victoria Ann Drive is asked to contact local authorities.

ANOTHER HOME INVASION, THIS ONE IN HARRISBURG, REPORTED; ONE IN CUSTODY

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crime, crime scene, tape, police, law enforcement

HARRISBURG, Ill.---A home invasion that took place in Saline County yesterday (Sunday, April 19) in broad daylight was actually the first of two...and one person this evening might be in custody because of one little thing the alleged criminals didn't think about.

The first home invasion occurred at about 4 p.m. Sunday, this on Raymond Street in Harrisburg. In it, two black males entered the home with gun and a knife and stole money and phone from the resident.

The second, as outlined earlier this evening, occurred in the overnight hours in Carrier Mills.

However, one is in custody this evening...because the thugs didn't take into consideration that the homeowner on Raymond Street might have had video running. Which he did.

Authorities are at this time searching for the second suspect. If you have any information, contact your local law enforcement agency.

 

NO OP ON FILE AT SALINE FROM MURDERED WOMAN

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Rodney Black's mugshot from booking at Saline County Detention Center

Rodney Black's mugshot from booking at Saline County Detention Center

SALINE CO., Ill.---Despite what she had been telling people, the woman who was stabbed to death last Friday in Eldorado had never filed paperwork seeking an order of protection against Rodney Black.

LaTisha Reidelberger, from her Facebook page

LaTisha Reidelberger, from her Facebook page

Black, 56, is the man now charged with the homicide of LaTisha Reidelberger, 28, the woman in question who many friends and acquaintances have told Disclosure was "trying to get an OP against him but nobody at the courthouse would listen."

As it turns out, that's not exactly the case.

Authorities checked the record at Saline County Circuit Clerk Randy Nyberg's office, and neither Nyberg, nor any of the deputy clerks there, have on file any attempt by Reidelberger to obtain any kind of protective order against Black.

The clerk's office clarified that if a person seeks an order of protection, all they have to do is file a petition and request a hearing. If there is no judge available, a hearing will be set upon the next availability of any judge. But the paperwork is ALWAYS filed; no one at the clerk's office can or will prevent a petition from being filed, and paperwork for the petition is always supplied upon request.

This stands in contrast with what sources were claiming last Friday: That Reidelberger had told them she'd "tried to get an order of protection" against Black in recent months, those leading up to the alleged attack on the 17th. These sources said that Reidelberger told them she'd "been refused" an OP at the circuit clerk's office. As a result of this information, many friends opined that had Reidelberger been able to get the OP, she might be alive.

However, two points must be made: an OP certainly doesn't prevent an attack (reference the murders Gary Pate committed in White County in 2006, shortly after Kathleen Pate took out an OP against him); and the clerk's office doesn't "turn away" anyone seeking an OP in Saline.

Add to the situation the crisis the local women's center, Anna Bixby, is currently in right now...and the whole thing is a nightmare for those in Saline who are seeking assistance when there's a domestic issue the likes of which could turn deadly.

More information as we get it...check back frequently.

SECOND SALINE COUNTY HOME INVASION SUSPECT NOW BEHIND BARS; NAMES RELEASED

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KYLE MARTIN DAY

KYLE MARTIN DAY

SALINE CO.— Authorities have announced that the second of two suspects wanted in connection with recent home invasions has been apprehended and both are now in custody.

Currently being held in the Saline County Detention Center are Carl E. Campbell and Kyle Martin Day, 23.

The pair are said to have perpetrated two home invasions, one on April 19 and one on April 20.

The April 19 incident is said to have taken place at 4 p.m. on Raymond Street in Harrisburg.

Early reports indicated that two black men were caught on video surveillance entering the home with a gun and knife and stole money and a phone from the residence.

The incident on April 20 is said to have taken place at 15 Victoria Ann Dr., Carrier Mills.

A male victim in the Carrier Mills case, identified as Terry Felty, notified authorities via 911 that two men came into his house tied him up and made off with home electronics items before fleeing on foot.

Felty was said to have been uninjured.

Sources indicate that at approximately 4 a.m. April 20 authorities received a tip which caused them to stake out a residence in Carrier Mills until one of the alleged perps, identified as Campbell, made his move.

When that happened Campbell was tailed to Harrisburg where city officers were waiting to intercept.

Carrier Mills authorities received another tip from an area citizen and that, along with information provided by the Harrisburg Police, lead to the apprehension of Day.

Day's criminal history

Day’s criminal history includes an arrested January 8, 2011 during which he was charged with Aggravated Battery. The charge was pled down September 30, 2011 to Battery and Day was sentenced to 18 months probation and ordered to pay $24,352.77 in fines and fees, of which he still owes $21,352.77.

He was arrested February 1, 2012 and charged with Unlawful Possession of Cannabis 2.5-10 grams, Reckless Driving, Driving on a Revoked License and Disregarding a Stop Sign.

He pled guilty to the reckless driving charge in return for the remainder of the charges being dismissed.

For his cooperation Mr. Day was sentenced to 25 hours public service and ordered to pay $717 in fines and fees, of which he still owes $217.

Day currently has a pending felony case in Saline from July 8, 2013 in which he is charged with one count each of Receiving/Possession/Selling Stolen Property and Aggravated Fleeing Police/21 mph over the posted limit.

On Sept. 26, 2013 he became the subject of an Order of Protection taken out against him on behalf of one Kirstin Heberer.

He was charged with Violating an Order of Protection shortly thereafter.

That case is pending as well.

Day also has a collection of criminal charges pending from last year including Retail Theft from July 19, and Criminal Damage to Property $300-$10,000 from Sept. 1

Given his pending cases and current charges, it very well could be that Mr. Day has stepped into a pile of criminal crap he is not going to get out of this time.

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