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IN THE NEWS
Waste case scooped up
JILLIAN DUCHNOWSKI -
jduchnowski@nwherald.com
September 10, 2009
WOODSTOCK – Prosecutors plan to refile charges against an
Algonquin woman who removed a pet-waste can after a judge dismissed
the case Thursday on a technicality. Carrie Fosdale, 46, has said
she took the doggie waste station in October in protest after Old
Oak Terrace Homeowners Association representatives installed it near
her townhome. She was charged with theft under $300, a misdemeanor
punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
McHenry County Judge Charles Weech agreed with defense attorney
George Kililis that prosecutors cannot amend charges that did not
include all the elements of the alleged crime. But Weech gave
prosecutors permission to refile the case, which Assistant State’s
Attorney Demetri Tsilimigras said they planned to do.
Prosecutors said they had been trying to save time and effort by
amending the existing charges rather than dropping and refiling
them.
They also added a second count of theft when they added language to
the first count in July.
Kililis maintained that his client’s actions were part of a
neighborhood dispute, not a crime.
“I don’t think she has the slightest criminal intent in her body,”
Kililis said outside court. “And she didn’t then.”
Tsilimigras declined to comment on why prosecutors were refiling the
case. Calls seeking comment from State’s Attorney Louis Bianchi and
Nichole Owens, chief of Bianchi’s Criminal Division, were not
immediately returned Thursday.
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