We all encounter that feeling of less than

Hey friends and family, please visit me over at Bittersweet for this week’s post. And please make sure you are signed up to receive notices of future Bittersweet posts on ChicagoNow. Simply enter your email address on the Bittersweet site. 

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/09/i-am-good-enough-you-are-good-enough/

Until next time……

Mario Casciaro seeking a new trial

As Mario Casciaro walked out of lock up and into a McHenry County courtroom wearing county issued orange garb, he blew a kiss to family members who were in court in the hopes of having his murder conviction overturned.

But they all will need to wait until Sept. 24 for Judge Sharon Prather to make her ruling.

Casciaro, 30, appeared in court on a motion to appeal his conviction. He has been in jail since being found guilty in April of first-degree murder with intimidation, in the murder of 17-year-old Brian Carrick.

Carrick worked as a stockboy with Casciaro at Val’s Foods in Johnsburg. The grocery store was partly owned by the Casciaro family at the time.

Carrick was last seen alive with Casciaro and Shane Lamb on the evening of Dec. 20, 2002.

Casciaro has long been accused of calling in Lamb to collect a $500 drug debt from Carrick.

This was Casciaro’s second first-degree murder trial. The first trial ended last year in a hung jury.

During both trials, Lamb, who has received immunity in the case in exchange for his testimony, testified that Casciaro asked him to come to the grocery store and help collect his money. Lamb further testified that he became angry with Carrick and punched him and Carrick fell to the ground inside the cooler unconscious. Blood was coming from his nose. Lamb said he then left and doesn’t know what happened to Carrick after that. Lamb said he never saw Carrick again.

Prosecutors have long said that Casciaro knowingly used Lamb as an “enforcer,” “intimidator” and “thug” to get the money from Carrick.

Brian Telander, Casciaro’s attorney, argued that even Lamb himself testified in both trials that he was never told by Casciaro to hurt or intimidate Carrick.

“At no time did (Casciaro) tell Shane Lamb to threaten (Carrick) to get the money,” Telander said adding that at no time did Casciaro tell Lamb to “intimidate,” or “kick his butt,” or “scare him to get the money.”

“He told Lamb ‘come and talk to (Brian),’” Telander insisted. “Come talk to him about the money.”

Telander said that the jury’s conviction was wrong and not based on evidence that was “believable beyond a reasonable doubt.”

“The jury got it wrong,” he said during the hearing.  “Lamb said he got there, got in an argument … ‘I lost my temper and I hit him.’” At no time did he say he threatened Brian Carrick. … “At no time did (Mario) say anything or do anything or make a threat. Shane Lamb only acted out of anger.”

Investigators have said that Carrick’s blood was found in and around the produce cooler where witnesses testified to last seeing him with Casciaro and Lamb.  His blood also was found on boxes in an outside garbage dumpster behind the store.

His body has never been found.

Assistant State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally strongly disagreed with Telander’s claims.

“If Shane Lamb wasn’t there to intimidate Brian Carrick, then exactly what was he there to do?” Kenneally said. “Why couldn’t (Casciaro) just ask Brian Carrick for the money? Shane Lamb had a reputation for violence. Shane Lamb was known as a person who was violent, he was known as the person to collect the money for Mario Casciaro.”

Kenneally pointed out that Lamb was a big guy in comparison to Carrick’s small frame.

“Shane Lamb is intimidating,” Kenneally said. “Shane Lamb will engage in violence. It’s just that simple. The defendant was well aware of what he was doing when he brought Shane Lamb in.”

Outside the courtroom, Telander said he was “encouraged” that (Prather) is taking this seriously.  I’m thrilled she’s doing this.”

Along side Telander stood Kathleen Zellner, a high-profile attorney known on a national level for representing people whose civil rights have been violated, according to her website.

Telander said should his motion to overturn the conviction not be successful in Prather’s courtroom, Zellner will take the case on to the appellate court.

Zellner said  Casciaro was wrongfully convicted of intimidation in a case where there was “no threat at all and no weapons.”

“No court in the U.S. would support this conviction,” Zellner said adding that she is “confident” his conviction will be reversed.

In an earlier emailed statement, Mario’s sister, Joanne Casciaro, wrote that prosecutors used her brother as a “scapegoat, so they can say they solved the case.”

The family declined to comment further after the hearing.

But before parting ways after the hearing Jerry Casciaro, Mario’s father, approached William Carrick, Brian’s father. Both, broken hearted men who love their sons. The father of the accused and the father of the victim shook hands.

A sign of healing, forgiveness in a tragedy that has overshadowed one small town and hurt many lives over the last decade?  Maybe.

Please, comment, share, sign up to follow me!  Until next time ….

My morning with Epilepsy

Hi friends and family, please visit me over at Bittersweet for my latest blog post, until next time……

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/08/epilepsy-woke-me-up-this-morning/

My day with mom at “The Tall Ships”

Amanda Marrazzo's avatarAmanda Marrazzo

 

Hi friends, family and followers, please visit me over at Bittersweet and share my lates blog.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/08/the-tall-ships-and-the-wonderful/

View original post

My day with mom at “The Tall Ships”

 

Hi friends, family and followers, please visit me over at Bittersweet and share my lates blog.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/08/the-tall-ships-and-the-wonderful/

Please visit my new post over at Bittersweet.com

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/08/god-im-back-hopefully-on-my-way-to-a-better-version-of-me/

Been a long time, I’m trying!

Hi friends and family, it’s been a while, but I posted a little something over at Bittersweet.com.  Thanks! 

Until next time, love each other.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/07/the-ultimate-curse-writers-block/

Victory and tragedy – Another tale of Bittersweet

Hi friends and family, please visit me over at ChicagoNow’s Bittersweet site this morning. Link below.

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/06/blackhawks-win-andrus-slayings/

As always comments and thoughts welcomed and appreciated……

The value of a news reporter

Hi friends and family, I posted over at Bittersweet on ChicagoNow (link below). Please visit, read, “like,” share and comment. I’d appreciate your opinions and thoughts on this one. For all of you who have ever done something, worked at something that you’ve poured your heart and soul into only to have it be dismissed, belittled, perhaps labeled as “undesirable” this one s for you! I was seeing red writing this post!

 

http://www.chicagonow.com/bittersweet/2013/06/an-undesirable-profession-poppycock/

 

Until next time…..

Neighborhood friend/youth mentor – convicted pedophile

Some additional detail added that could help prevent this abuse from happening again.

Amanda Marrazzo's avatarAmanda Marrazzo

Friends and family,

Please know where your children are and who they are with. Even if they are with a mentor associated with a kid-friendly organization….know your kids are safe. (Link below)

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/suburbs/mchenry_woodstock_huntley/chi-former-big-brothers-mentor-guilty-of-child-sex-abuse-20130530,0,7926618.story

I feel it is important that I add a bit more detail to this story, details that did not make it into the new story:

The grown men who came forward during the trial, knew their molester from the neighborhood where they all lived at one time, and for whatever reason actually lived with him for some time during the molestation. They only came to investigators after they saw a story two years ago that he had been arrested and charged with sexually assaulting a 12-year-old boy. They were ashamed and scared to come forward earlier but felt they needed to come forward to stop Puccini from hurting other boys. After he molested them in the 1990s…

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