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IN THE NEWS
Judge recommends boot-camp program
JILLIAN DUCHNOWSKI - jduchnowski@nwherald.com
December 10, 2008
WOODSTOCK – A Huntley man accused of giving an 18-year-old woman
the heroin that made her slip into a coma could be released in six
months if he successfully completes a boot-camp program, his
attorney said. Joseph Pace, 20, of 11611 Bernice Ave., Huntley,
pleaded guilty Tuesday to two counts of unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance.
He was sentenced to eight years in prison but recommended for the
state’s Impact Incarceration Program for young, non-violent
offenders who haven’t been incarcerated more than once.
Pace will have to serve the prison sentence if he is not accepted to
the program or if he flunks out. He could have been sentenced to up
to 15 years in prison for selling six bags of heroin to an
undercover officer for $120 in a Woodstock grocery store parking lot
June 20.
Defense attorney George Kililis said he expected that Pace would
become a productive member of society after he’s released.
“If you have any sympathy for the state’s complaining witnesses
because they were victims of their addiction, then you’ve got to
have sympathy for [Pace] because he, too, was a victim of
addiction,” Kililis said. “All his activities were because of his
addiction.”
In exchange for his guilty plea, prosecutors dropped two other
drug-related charges and reduced a count of drug-induced aggravated
battery to unlawful delivery of a controlled substance.
If the cases went to trial, testimony would show that Kelly
Cunningham, of Carpentersville, and her boyfriend drove with Pace to
Chicago, where he bought heroin from his regular supplier Aug. 15.
Cunningham overdosed on heroin two days later. When she recovered,
she had trouble remembering what happened before the overdose, said
Nichole Owens, chief of the McHenry County State’s Attorney’s
Criminal Division.
“There was a chance that someone else had delivered the drugs to
her,” Owens said.
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