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IN THE NEWS
Concealing homicide charge dropped in Carrick case
By JILLIAN DUCHNOWSKI -
jduchnowski@nwherald.com
January 15, 2010
WOODSTOCK – Prosecutors dropped charges today against the
24-year-old Johnsburg area man accused of concealing Brian Carrick’s
2002 homicide.
Assistant State’s Attorney Michael Combs said the investigation into
Carrick’s disappearance remains ongoing. The felony charge against
Robert Render was dropped this morning, but can be refiled at any
time, he said.
“We want to continue our investigation and put our best evidence
forward,” Combs said, adding authorities have interviewed witnesses
as recently as last week.
Carrick, a 17-year-old Johnsburg High School student, was last seen
about 6:45 p.m. Dec. 20, 2002, walking into Val’s Foods across the
street from his house. His body has not been recovered, but his
blood was found in a produce cooler and in boxes from a trash
compactor at the store, where he worked as a stock boy.
Render’s attorney, George Kililis, said prosecutors need to prove
that a defendant knew the victim died of homicidal means to prove a
charge of homicidal death. That can be difficult to accomplish
without the victim’s body or an established time of death.
Kililis said he believes Render is innocent.
“I think the State’s position is he knows something and isn’t saying
anything,” Kililis said. “In this charge, what he must know is
homicidal death.”
This case is the second the McHenry County State’s Attorney’s Office
has pursued surrounding Carrick’s disappearance without a
conviction.
In August, Judge Sharon Prather threw out charges against Mario
Casciaro, 26, of McHenry, alleging that he had lied to a grand jury
about his involvement in Carrick’s disappearance.
After prosecutors presented their main evidence in Casciaro’s trial,
defense attorney William Gibbs successfully asked Prather to find
that prosecutors had not proven their case, even if their evidence
was seen in the light most favorable to prosecutors.
Mario Casciaro faced two counts of perjury after he denied having
about a conversation with Alan Lippert. Lippert, 26, testified that
after a night of drinking, Casciaro told him the story of what
happened to Carrick.
“He said Brian owed him money and he told Shane [Lamb] to scare him,
but things got out of hand,” Lippert testified in August. “He said
that after the accident he had his relatives help move the body
outside of Val’s.”
In August, prosecutors said their case against Casciaro would have
been stronger if they had been allowed to present audio tapes of a
conversation recorded by Lippert without Casciaro’s knowledge. But
portions of the tape were garbled, so it was not admissible.
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