Judge denies change of venue & special prosecutor for Shane Lamb – Trial set to begin Jan. 12

Shane Lamb -best known in McHenry County for providing testimony in a murder trial that landed a Fox Lake man in prison for 26 years – recently lost an attempt to have a special prosecutor try his latest felony when it goes to trial in January.

Lamb, also lost motions for a change of venue and the suppression of evidence that led to his arrest in April. He has been charged with residential burglary, possession of stolen firearms and being an “armed habitual criminal.” He is accused of stealing a safe containing guns and ammunition from the McHenry home of a friend.

His attorney Paul DeLuca argued that because Lamb has a long and sorted history with McHenry County State’s Attorney’s office and with Michael Combs, the chief of the county’s criminal division, he would not receive a fair trial.

Combs, whom DeLuca also subpoenaed to take the stand at the hearing which the judge denied, made a deal with Lamb in 2010 to tell a story that led to the conviction of Mario Casciaro, 31, in the 2002 disappearance and presumed death of Brian Carrick, 17. In exchange for his testimony, Lamb would never face charges in the case.

All three men worked at Val’s Foods, the Casciaro family grocery store, together and allegedly were selling drugs. Carrick, Lamb testified in two trials, was killed over a $500 drug debt he owed Casciaro. Carrick’s body was never found. He said, at Casciaro’s direction he argued with Carrick over the money. He then became angry and punched the boy and may have accidentally killed him inside a produce cooler at the grocery store. Casciaro, Lamb testified, told him he would take care of the body. Carrick’s body has never been found.

But in August Lamb, while sitting in jail awaiting trial for the unrelated theft case, recanted his testimony and said that Combs had coached him on what to tell jurors.

Combs has steadfastly denied any and all accusations made by Lamb.

DeLuca said because of this history with Combs and the state’s attorney’s office, Lamb would not be treated fairly in his upcoming trial.

He said although Combs would not be directly trying the case, attorneys in his office of whom he has control over, would be.

DeLuca motioned to call Combs as a witness during the hearing to ask him about his history with Lamb, but the judge denied that motion saying, having presided over both of Casciaro’s trials – the first ending in a mistrial in 2012 and the second resulting in his conviction in 2013 – she already knows all the details.

DeLuca wanted to ask Combs, given his history with Lamb, a five-time felon who never faced murder charges in the Carrick case, was he “directing his prosecutors in any way to seek the maximum sentence.”

“The defense has the right to challenge (Combs),” DeLuca said.

DeLuca said he has the right to call Combs to ask such questions and ask that he be removed from the case “if there is even an appearance of impropriety.”

He said given Lamb’s recantation in the Casciaro case, accusations against Combs and a recent incident in the courtroom when Lamb called Combs a “bully” there is “personal animus” against Lamb and “certainly an interest now to punish him more severely.”

Assistant State’s Attorney John Gibbons responded by saying that neither Lamb’s criminal history nor his involvement in Casciaro’s case have anything to do with his current situation and how the McHenry County prosecutors will handle it.

Lamb, he said, is the one with “personal animus” toward the prosecutors’ office.

He also is the one who committed a crime for which there is a range of penalties that he will now face, which have nothing to do with his history.

“There is no connection between (Carrick) murder and what he did with our office,” Gibbons said. “All issues and beliefs he has are based on things he has done himself. He chose it himself, he cannot prosecutor shop because he feels we are bullying him.”

To which Prather agreed stating this scenario does not meet certain criteria warranting a special prosecutor.

“This is a case about Shane Lamb,” Prather said. “The Casciaro case has nothing to do with this case. You cannot create cause based on your own actions. … Mr. Lamb has created any alleged (conflict) and he can’t create that conflict and then come here and complain.”

In his motion for change of venue, DeLuca noted more than 100 local newspaper articles and editorials written about Lamb and his long criminal history. He said “it would be a situation” in which he could not get a fair jury.

Assistant State’s Attorney Robert Zalud countered that it is more about Lamb’s own “ego” in believing that so many people are even aware of him.

Though he may be well known in the justice system, it does not mean he is as well known by the local jury pool, Zalud said.

“I think he will be shocked how many (people) don’t know or care about him, or forgot about him,” Zalud said.

Prather said that jurors will have to make a commitment to set aside what they may know and denied the motion for change of venue. However, she said she will reconsider the motion during jury selection if there appears to be an issue at the time of jury selection.

Prather also denied a motion to suppress evidence. DeLuca asked that the lineup in which he was identified by a neighbor be quashed. He said that the neighbor had been shown the same photo by the alleged victim prior to the police showing it to her in a lineup in which she identified Lamb as one who stole the safe.

A hearing has been set for Jan. 7 when DeLuca plans to argue motions to drop two counts of the indictment. He is expected to argue the state drop a class X charge of unlawful possession of weapons by a felon. The charge states that as a convicted felon he was in possession of a machine gun that was inside the safe he is alleged to have stolen. DeLuca states that there never was a machine gun inside the safe. He also will argue to dismiss a charge of “armed habitual criminal” because, DeLuca said, Lamb has never been convicted of a “forceable felony.”

Lamb’s father Dan Sinkovitz of Lake Bluff was present at the hearing.
He said his son has been treated unfairly by McHenry County prosecutors for years dating back to his first felony conviction of attempted murder when Lamb was just 14.

In that case Lamb was with another minor who shot at a woman in a local bakery. Though she lived, the boys were punished. One boy went off to a private treatment facility while Lamb when to a tough juvenile detention center in Illinois, he said.

His father believes that while the other boy went to a facility where he was rehabilitated, his son was sentenced to an institution where he was abused and beaten by tough street gang members.

Instead of rehabilitation, his son was hardened.

Sinkovitz said he tried to be there for his son, and help him get on the right path, but it seems, trouble always seemed to find him.

He said he is not surprised that the judge denied his son’s motions.

“It’s happened all along the way why shouldn’t it happen again,” he said.

Lamb’s January 12 trial is still set to go as planned.

Casciaro has maintained that he has no knowledge of what happened to Carrick and has pointed the finger at another Johnsburg man who died in 2012.

His case is still on appeal.

Deputies surprised by gunfire under the darkness of night: A story of courage and thanksgiving

What began as a typical midnight shift patrolling the quiet streets of Island Lake, quickly turned menacing when officers were alerted that sheriff’s deputies had come under fire in nearby Holiday Hills.

Within minutes of the call for help, at about 1:40 a.m. Island Lake Police Officers arrived at a crime scene to find two McHenry County Sheriff’s deputies gunned down and the armed assailant’s whereabouts unknown.

Under the cover of darkness on that chilly October morning three deputies made a well-being check on a home of a man now charged with opening fire on them. Authorities say that Scott B. Peters shot 15 .223-caliber bullets from a long-range AR 15 assault rifle at the deputies, seriously injuring two.

The harrowing incident has given new meaning to Thanksgiving for those involved.

Island Lake Police Officer Victoria Gwizdak, a single mom who lives with her 12-year-old daughter in Lake in the Hills, said this was the first time she was involved in an incident such as this – a shooter hidden in darkness, not knowing where he may have been or if he was still aiming his rifle at her and fellow officers.

She kept calm, did all that she was trained to do, continued to protect the fallen officers – but admitted that all the while she also thought about her own young daughter, and whether she would make it back home to her at the end of this shift.

“I’m most grateful that we all got home safe,” Gwizdak said noting that the injured deputies -whom she never met before this fateful night- also had loved ones and young children depending on them to make it home safe.

Last week, the wounded deputies Dwight Maness, 46, and Khalia Satkiewicz, 39, were present when Island Lake Deputy Chief David Walz detailed the first few terrifying moments when Gwizdak and officer Gilbert Hueramo drove down the dark road leading to Peters’ home at 1313 W. Northeast Shore Drive, spotted the wounded officers and protected them.

“Anybody and everybody on the street that night was in extreme danger,” Walz said.

Hueramo, 48, found Satkiewicz crouched down between two squad cars. She told him there was a shooter inside the white house and said she needed a tourniquet for Maness.

As Gwizdak covered him and moved Satkiewicz out of harms way, Hueramo ran to Maness lying in the street about 150 feet away, Hueramo applied a tourniquet to his bleeding left leg.

Not knowing where the shooter was or if he was going to continue shooting, Hueramo drug Maness further from the property with his left hand, keeping his right hand free to grab his gun if necessary. He was headed toward an iron fence that separates a neighboring subdivision, hoping to find a gate to get out of the possible line of fire. But in the darkness it was impossible to find it.

Once help arrived to care for Satkiewicz, Gwizdak ran to assist Hueramo and Maness. She had to climb over a 6-foot fence to reach them.

As Hueramo tried to turn Maness over to pick him up and carry him, Maness yelled out in pain, and the officers saw the deputy also had been shot in the back. One grabbing each hand, they carried him further away from the property. Hueramo prepared to drive Maness to the hospital himself, but moments later an ambulance and other help arrived.

“They did not hesitate to help their fellow officers and we are very proud of what they did,” Walz said.

Gwizdak said 19 hours after the incident began she returned home to see her daughter Jessica, 12.

“I gave her a hug of a lifetime,” she said. “But I was kind of sad for Khalia and Dwight.” Gwizdak said as the day’s events “settled in” it hit her that she returned home at the end of the day, and they were in the hospital.

“I’m so thankful that I was there and I did a good job,” she said.

On Thanksgiving Day Gwizdak said she will be most thankful for the loving people in her life, simple thoughts that may have been taken for granted on holiday’s past.

“I think that (I will) probably remember the real meaning of Thanksgiving,” she said.

“It won’t be that we are getting together to eat and stuff ourselves. It’s more we are thankful for what’s in front of you and whose in front of you. … We get busy in our lives and take lives for granted and when something like this happens you remember what you are thankful for and how lucky you are. … And to know (Maness and Satkiewicz) are gonna be home for thanksgiving … doesn’t that sound awesome?”

Gwizdak’s thoughts also turn to Peters’ own 12-year-old daughter this Thanksgiving.

”I hope she can have a somewhat normal Thanksgiving,” she said. “I hope she can be with the people that do love her … I hope she feels loved on that day.”

On this Thanksgiving Day, Jessica said she is thankful for her home and having parents who care for her. She is especially thankful her mom made it home that day. She said she is proud of her mother.

“I’m happy she wasn’t the one that got shot,” she said.

Hueramo, Gwizdak and a third officer Lisa Knebl were presented with life saving awards from the Island Lake Police Department and awards for bravery from the mayor of Holiday Hills.

Hueramo, of Mt. Prospect, today works as a part-time police officer in the far northwest suburban community, but has worked in law enforcement for 20 years including as a police officer on the city’s south side where he has come under gunfire.

He said he is most thankful he was on duty Oct. 16.

He originally was not scheduled to work but was called in at about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday when another officer went home sick.

When reflecting on the holiday, Hueramo said he is thankful for the extra training he had received form the Illinois Tactical Officers Association which prepared him for responding in an active shooter scenario and officer rescue.

“It was just the luck of the draw that I was there,” he said adding that no other Island Lake officer has the extensive training he has, nor do they carry the battery of medical supplies that he has been trained to carry, including the tourniquets he had to wrap the deputies’ wounds.

“I’m thankful I was there because Dwight has a family, he’s got kids, Khalia has kids …,” he said adding he is thankful McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Eric Luna was there on the scene first.

“If Eric Luna wasn’t there we could have all been killed,” he said. “If it wasn’t for Eric Luna returning fire … the guy would have killed them and as we would have been coming down the street he would have tried to kill us,” Hueramo said.

Hueramo said Maness’s chances for survival came down to the wire, having lost three pints of blood by the time he made it to the hospital. The officers arrived on the scene in three minutes, Hueramo said had it taken them five minutes to arrive and rescue the fallen deputies there could have been a more grave outcome.

“Thank God everything happened the way it did,” he said. “We were literally down to the minuets before it could have been all over.”

Hueramo’s mother Anne said this holiday season she is thankful her son is alive and that he was able to be there for the wounded deputies. She said although she knows her son is in a dangerous line of work, this incident really brought that fact to life.

“The man who did that, it was his intent to shoot the officers, that is what he wanted to do … like a trap or something,” she said. “He could have been killed very easy … I am very thankful, happy he wasn’t shot and he’s still alive and that no body else was killed either. It could have gone the opposite way very easy.”

After last week’s award’s ceremony, Satkiewiz’s husband, Illinois State Police Major Sgt. Robert Satkiewicz walked up and shook Hueramo’s hand and said thank you.

“I think they’re heroes,” he said. “I think they’re awesome.”

Police Chief Keith Nygren recently presented Maness and Satkiewicz with Purple Hearts. Luna, who sheltered the wounded officers while exchanging gunfire with Peters was honored with the Award of Valor. Luna is back at work while Maness and Satkiewicz are still recovering.

The Oct. 16 incident drew hundreds of police officers from several departments from across the state.

Peters, 52, who led police on a 17-hour manhunt before being captured that day, is being held in the McHenry County jail on $7 million bond. He has pleaded not guilty to six counts of first-degree attempted murder, five counts of aggravated discharge of a firearm at a peace officer acting in the official capacity, and two counts of aggravated battery discharge of a firearm at a peace officer acting in an official duty.

Peters is expected back in court Dec. 12. The charges against Peters carry “special sentencing” because he shot at police officers, prosecutors said. He faces a minimum of 165 years to natural life in prison if convicted.

A new holiday for our most faithful friends

Hey all friends, family and followers:

 

Over on Chicago Now’s Bittersweet we were challenged to create a new holiday. So I came up with one I think many of you will appreciate! Please visit(link below) and let me know what you think.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/11/happy-homeless-pet-day-because-they-hurt-no-one-ever/#comment-54

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and let’s take a break from all the violence, pain and sadness we are all being so inundated with lately. I think it’s OK to take a break from the darkness once in a while and no better time to do that than today. Sometimes during the break, we can refresh so that we are able to better deal with the dark times moving forward.

Check out Bittersweet and let me know who would be up for creating this new holiday!

Until next time …..

 

Johnsburg Illinois missing boy’s mystery continues: 12 years later no real answers, plenty of theories, peace for no one

While one attorney prepares a new trial for Shane Lamb, a key witness in the notorious 12-year-old Johnsburg missing person’s case, another attorney works to free the man she says was wrongfully convicted based on Lamb’s testimony.

Last week, a private attorney out of DuPage County working pro bono for Lamb who is being held in the McHenry County jail on $300,000 bond, filed motions before Judge Sharon Prather in preparation for Lamb’s January trial. De Luca is asking for a change in venue, disqualification the state’s attorney’s office from prosecuting Lamb and suppression of the line up in which Lamb was identified by a witness.

Lamb, charged with residential burglary, possession of stolen firearms and being an  “armed habitual criminal,” is facing upwards of about 40 years in prison if found guilty.  He is accused of stealing a safe from the McHenry  home of an acquaintance.  The safe, which has not yet been recovered, contained a number of guns and rounds of ammunition.

But Lamb’s story in the McHenry County courtroom began years earlier.

Besides his first felony conviction for attempted murder at the age of 14, and multiple convictions for drugs and battery charges — Lamb is best known locally as the star witness whose testimony landed Mario Casciaro, of  Fox Lake, in prison for 26 years for the 2002 murder of Brian Carrick, 17.

Lamb has recently recanted his story and claims to have been coached on what to say on camera in exchange for full immunity in Carrick’s disappearance and presumed death by chief of the criminal division for McHenry County Michael Combs.

Casciaro, 31, who sits in Menard Correctional Center, stood trial twice for the murder of Brian Carrick who worked with him in his family’s Johnsburg grocery store.

The first trial in 2012 ended in mistrial. In 2013 Casciaro was found guilty of first-degree murder by intimidation, what legal experts say is a rare conviction.

In both trials the case weighed predominately on Lamb’s testimony. Lamb, 30, said under oath that Casciaro was selling drugs in the small town by using kids like himself and Carrick.

When Carrick owed Casciaro a drug debt of nearly $500, Lamb said on Friday night Dec. 20, 2002, Casciaro called him to the store as the “enforcer” of the drug operation to help collect the money.

Lamb told two juries he argued with Carrick inside a produce cooler at the store and became violent when the boy argued back. Lamb testified he punched Carrick out cold. He said Carrick, who had a known heart condition for which he had open heart surgery when he was 10, “fell out.”

Lamb said he went down backward into the cooler bleeding and unconscious. Casciaro then told him to leave, which he did, and he never saw Carrick again. Lamb said that over the years he would ask Casciaro what happened to Carrick to which Casciaro would respond “don’t worry about it,” or “keep your mouth shut.”

Carrick’s body has never been found.

Lamb, who said he never meant to kill or hurt Carrick, maintained throughout both trials that he would not have been at the store that night had Casciaro not called him.

But today, Lamb, facing serious prison time on his new theft charges, said he lied on the stand in both trials.

He now claims he was never at the store that night and Casciaro also has no knowledge of what happened to Carrick. He further claims that Combs coached him on what to say in order to convict Casciaro.

Jonathan Masur,  law professor at the University of Chicago law school, said in order for Casciaro to be granted a new trial or be released from prison the judge first must believe Lamb’s new tale, but it’s likely she won’t.

“I have pages of law books littered with key witnesses who have later recanted their testimony and courts that have refused to believe the new information,” Masur said.

“If the judge is convinced that what (Lamb) is saying right now is correct … this is momentous this is enormously important,” Masur said.  “(Casciaro) could very well be released and get a new trial at which he might very well be acquitted. “If what (Lamb) is saying is truthful, then the police and prosecutors involved have committed crimes.”

But Masur added it is a “very big if” whether Prather will believe Lamb’s recantation. Prather, the presiding judge in both trials and other court matters related to this case, knows the history and the evidence.

Over the years, Lamb has been on record telling different stories about Carrick’s disappearance. In 2004 and 2006 he is documented as saying he knew nothing about the night Carrick disappeared. In 2007, Lamb told a Grand Jury he knew nothing about Carrick’s disappearance. In 2010, facing unrelated drug charges, he received his immunity deal, and under oath, gave the story that resulted in Casciaro’s conviction.

Additionally, Masur said, Lamb could lose his immunity and be indicted for murder.

“This sort of thing happens (frequently) and the judge might very well believe (Lamb) is now lying because he has very little to lose by lying,” Masur said citing Lamb’s latest case for which he is facing a decades-long prison sentence.  “The judge could think he is lying (now) trying to do (Casciaro) a favor.”

Combs rebuked Lamb’s accusations saying they are “illogical.” He vehemently denies ever being alone with Lamb. He equally discounts the assertion he ever coached him in anyway. “That is not plausible.” Combs said he has a sworn affidavit from Lamb’s former lawyer supporting his truthfulness.

In August, Lamb calling Combs a “bully” rejected a plea deal in his current case.

Lamb’s attorney, De Luca said Lamb is now telling the truth.

“He’s got nothing to gain. … He’s got everything to lose, everything, he’s (facing) a murder indictment,” De Luca said.

De Luca said Lamb never believed that his testimony would convict Casciaro and now feels responsible for him being in prison and wants to help get him freed. De Luca said Lamb has told him that on the night Carrick disappeared he was “at a party all night” and that, Casciaro never called him and that he never went back to the store. However, during both trials Lamb’s sworn testimony was corroborated by witnesses. One man said that after a night of drinking in 2006, he asked Casciaro what happened to Carrick. The man testified at both trials that Casciaro told him the very story that Lamb told on the stand in both trials. Another man said he argued with Casciaro in a bar one night and Casciaro told him he’d better watch it because he “makes people disappear.”

Kathleen Zellner, Casciaro’s appellate attorney, discounts these witnesses’ testimony alleging they had deals with prosecutors to tell their stories. Zellner also claims Casciaro’s attorneys were not given all the evidence or names of witnesses in the case.

Calling the allegations “ridiculous” Combs said Casciaro’s defense attorneys had knowledge of all evidence and witnesses since 2007 when he was charged with perjury in connection with Carrick’s disappearance. Casciaro was acquitted of those charges.

Zellner theorizes that another employee, Rob Render, attacked Carrick with a box cutter, shoved his body into a garbage can and rolled the can out back of the store. She said someone later would have come to pick up the garbage can and dispose of the boy’s body.

But Combs, who said Render is being used by the Casciaros as a “scapegoat” counters Zellner’s theory as “idiotic, to say a 17-year-old kid without a car could dispose of a body.”

An attorney who represented Render in 2008 when he was charged with concealment of a homicide in Carrick’s disappearance– charges that later were dropped — said Zellner’s accusations are “unconscionable.”

“He was a junky, he was a stoner … he had a difficult childhood,” said George Kililis. “Otherwise he was a very gentle kid, he was kind … there was not a bad bone in his body. This is the kind of kid who would never hurt anyone.”

Kililis completely discounts Zellner’s theory and said he will always defend Render’s innocence. He said her theory is implausible pointing out that there is no way Render, a small framed boy at the time, could have secretly disposed of Carrick’s body and cleaned up all the blood that would have spilled from Carrick had he been sliced with a knife.

He said the shadow of Carrick’s death followed Render throughout his life and likely led to his heroin overdose in 2012.

“He told me privately part of the reason he turned to heroin was because he could never get away from this as much as he tired,” Kililis said. “Everybody thought he knew something about this, they tortured this kid. … I want them to leave my guy alone in his grave … I want them to leave him alone.”

Zellner and Combs recently entered an “agreed order” to have clothing items tested for DNA that had been retrieved from Render’s garbage can by a surveillance team six days after Carrick went missing.

“I have nothing to hide so I will not oppose testing,” Combs said.

Zellner had hoped to have a pair of “soiled” underwear also tested for DNA. She believed that the underwear would link authorities to whoever murdered Carrick. Authorities said the underwear were found above a ceiling tile in the bathroom of the grocery store.

However, the underwear won’t be tested because they no longer exist, authorities have said.

“We are outraged that the (Johnsburg Police Department) threw out the most crucial piece of evidence in this case so far, the bloody underwear,” Casciaro’s sister Julia Casciaro-Mulle wrote in a letter. “We strongly believe that the DNA testing of this underwear could clear Mario. We want to know what happened to it.”

Combs said this should have come as no surprise to the Casciaros.

“The Casciaro family has known that underwear has been gone for seven years because their attorney was provided that information in discovery in 2007 when (Cassciaro) was charged with perjury,” Comb said.

Zellner said she and Combs have met and discussed the case.

“The more cooperation there is the more likely we are to get to the truth of what happened,” Zellner said.

At a later date Zellner said she will file an amended petition for post conviction relief in McHenry County based, in part on Lamb’s new story. She also is appealing Casciaro’s conviction in the Second District Appellate Court based. This appeal is, in part, based on forensic evidence from the 2013 trial. She claims, among other allegations, that the blood patterns found do not match what experts say would have happened had Carrick been punched. Zellner believes the murder did not happen in the cooler as authorities have maintained for more than a decade, but that it happened in the hallway leading to a back exit door.

Rob Render Senior testified at trial that his son came home that night right after work and never went back out. A fellow co-worker who drove Render home that night said he did not notice blood or cuts on Render.  Though defense attorneys pointed to him throughout the first trial, Render Jr. had never been called to testify. He died of a heroin overdose before the second trial.

Zellner says Casciaro was accounted for throughout the evening, while Render was missing for two hours, and Render’s blood was found inside the cooler.

Combs said there were a couple “very, very” tiny drops of Render’s blood found and that there is no way of knowing how old that blood was. Combs also said that no one ever claimed to have seen Render bleeding that night. In fact, Combs said, Casciaro under sworn testimony before a Grand Jury, said he never saw any blood or cuts on Render that night.

Masur described what Combs did in this case, as “extraordinary and completely within legal bounds.”

“It is rare for a crime like intimidation to be used as the underlying felony,” he said.
The charge is a way to “rope in people who were peripheral pieces to this murder.”
He said likely Combs believed Casciaro “was a really bad guy.”

After Lamb recanted his story the Carrick family was contacted. A sibling said the family has no comment. Bill Carrick, Brian’s father, still lives in the family home across the road from the grocery store where his son was last seen alive.

Lamb’s next court date is Dec. 12. Casciaro’s attorneys are expected back in the McHenry Courtroom in January.

To learn more on the case visit link (below) to ABC 2020 feature “Mystery on Johnsburg Road.”

http://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video;_ylt=AwrBT8dGAWxUbb0AcwJXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTB0bjAxNjdrBHNlYwNzYwRjb2xvA2JmMQR2dGlkA1ZJUDIyN18x?p=abc+mystery+on+johnsburg+road

 

Simple steps to transform your life

Hi friends and family,

Life has felt so hectic and out of control lately.

I learned a few useful tips this weekend for a happier, more calm life that I’d like to share with you!

Please visit me over at Bittersweet (link below) and share with your friends if you find this useful.

Hope life has been good to you all. I’d love to hear from you in my comments section.

Until next time, love each other

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/10/how-you-can-transform-your-life-in-three-easy-steps/

I’ve been away a while…

HI friends and family, I had been away from my blogs for a while. Is it a block? Is it that I’m too busy? I think it’s a combination of both.

Well, here below is a link to Bittersweet where I share a special letter written to a piece of my heart. I think it is something many of us can relate to.

Until next time, love each other.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/06/a-love-letter-to-one-of-my-greatest-loves/

The Big Apple with my Girl

 

Hi friends and family,

OK, so here we are in the homestretch with Emily wrapping up her high school years…

We are visiting New York this week as her early graduation gift.

We are staying in Time Square and have a couple Broadway shows lined up and she is so super excited.

Please visit me over at Bittersweet (link below).

And moms, I ask you to please participate in this one. It’s short and sweet, but jam packed with what I believe all of us parents can relate to. I’d really appreciate your input!

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/03/the-big-apple-with-my-big-girl/

Until next time ……

 

Sparkles in the darkness

 

Hi friends and family,

I have not posted much over here lately, but I did post over on Bittersweet and I invite you to visit me over there (link below).

Hope this latest entry finds you all happy, healthy and safe.

If not, remember the sun soon will shine. Until next time….

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/03/sparkle-and-darkness-keeping-each-in-its-place/

Smile break: Dogs with Old Man Faces: Portraits of Crotchety Canines

Hi friends and family:

Please visit Bittersweet and read about a new coffee-table book I recently reviewed! The author Tom Cohen, a TV executive, recently contacted me to review it and it is so darn cute!

Please support Bittersweet!

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2014/01/woof-a-book-that-celebrates-personality-old-age-and-our-favorite-furry-four-leggers/

Until next time…..

 

Man in prison 40 years for killing girlfriend

 

Ladies, take this story as a cautionary tale, men treat your women well….

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/suburbs/mchenry_woodstock_huntley/chi-huntley-man-sentenced-in-girlfriends-beating-death-20140124,0,6076866.story