Monday, December 1, 2014

Theft in Circuit Clerk’s Office Finally Coming to Trial

Donna Osoria’s Plea Hearing is scheduled for Thursday, December 4, 2014 at 1:30

Donna Osoria, a former employee of the Clerk of the  Boone County Circuit Court, was charged with stealing county funds in 2012.  The case is now finally coming to a close.  A hearing regarding the plea  will be heard in Judge Tobin’s courtroom at 1:30PM, Thursday.  Plea bargaining  may end the case before the scheduled bench trial on December 8.

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The above is taken from:  http://www.judici.com/courts/cases/case_history.jsp?court=IL004015J&ocl=IL004015J,2012CF187,IL004015JL2012CF187D1

 

Original Press Coverage:

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Boone County Employee Arrested

By: Meghan Dwyer

Donna Osoria, 56, of Belvidere, has been charged with one count of Theft and one count of Official Misconduct.

BOONE COUNTY (WIFR) -- A woman who has worked for the Boone County government for more than a decade, is accused of stealing more than $10,000 from the circuit clerk's office.
56-year-old Donna Osoria is being charged with one count of theft and one count of official misconduct. The Boone County State's Attorney says she has been out of a job since June 22.

Osoria had been a deputy clerk for twelve years. She was arrested Tuesday night at her home in Belvidere and is being held on a $50,000 bond in the Boone County Jail. The State's Attorney says she's confident Osoria acted alone and no other employees broke the law, but officials are not saying exactly how much money was stolen, just that it was more than $10,000 and less than $100,000.

"Obviously these are serious charges. Theft charges are always serious but including the theft charge, we do have the official misconduct charge as well because she was a deputy circuit clerk at the time that this occurred," said Michelle Courier, the Boone County State's Attorney.

The State's Attorney isn't releasing any details on whether there was an audit done office-wide, or if someone came forward with information. Unlike the Rita Crundwell case, the Dixon comptroller who is accused of stealing millions, this case is not a Federal one, so she didn't transfer any money across state lines.

Court documents say Osoria allegedly started stealing money in March of 2010 and kept stealing it until this June. The State's Attorney will not say whether she was fired or she quit.


BOONE COUNTY (WIFR) -- Boone County State’s Attorney, Michelle J. Courier, announced that Donna Osoria, 56, of Belvidere, has been charged with one count of Theft and one count of Official Misconduct. The charges against Osoria allege that between March 15, 2010 and June 22, 2012, Osoria, while employed with the Boone County Circuit Clerk, committed a theft by taking in excess of $10,000 but not in excess of $100,000 of United States currency from the Boone County Circuit Clerk’s Office.

The Theft charge is a Class 1 felony and is punishable by 4 to 15 years in the Department of Corrections. The Official Misconduct charge is a Class 3 felony and is punishable by 2 to 5 years in the Department of Corrections.

Osoria is in custody, and her bond is set at $50,000.

Judge Tobin’s decision in Plote Case

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8 States Where Gas Will Drop Below $2 - 24/7 Wall St.

 

The eight states were gas prices are likely to fall below $2 are Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Missouri, and Tennessee.

Several of these are either on the Gulf of Mexico or states adjacent to ones that are. Each already has gas prices below $2.60. In all but one, the price has continued to fall over the last several days.

Mississippi, Alabama, Texas, and Louisiana are directly on the Gulf of Mexico and close to the large refineries in Texas, which, taken together, are among the biggest block of refineries in the world. Oklahoma and Tennessee border at least one of these four states. So, each has the advantage that among the variable costs of gasoline is the distance it must travel from refineries to retailers.

Rad more:  8 States Where Gas Will Drop Below $2 - 24/7 Wall St.

NASA spaceship ready for test flight - CNN.com

 

Orion is scheduled to lift off on its first test flight at 7:05 a.m. ET Thursday from Space Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral, Florida. The launch window will be open for two hours and 39 minutes.

Orion will climb to an altitude of 3,600 miles (15 times higher than the International Space Station) and orbit Earth twice during the four and a half hour test run, NASA says. The spaceship will splash down in the Pacific Ocean about 600 miles off the coast of Baja California. Two U.S. Navy ships, the USS Anchorage and the USNS Salvor, will help NASA recover the capsule.

Orion is wrapped in protective panels before being moved to the launch pad on November 10.\n

Orion is wrapped in protective panels before being moved to the launch pad on November 10.

 

This first flight won't carry any astronauts, but it will move NASA closer to getting back in the crewed spaceflight business. The U.S. has had to pay Russia's space agency to launch astronauts to the space station since the space shuttle program ended in 2011.

Orion's crew module is designed to carry four people on a 21-day mission. But it could support six astronauts for shorter missions. By comparison, the Apollo capsules held three astronauts and were out in space for about six to 12 days.

Read more:  NASA spaceship ready for test flight - CNN.com