Illinois
Illinois doctor who killed witness in fraud case among those spared from death row by Biden
A doctor from Illinois who shot and killed a woman to prevent her from testifying against him is among the 37 people whose death sentences were commuted to life in prison by President Joe Biden Monday.
Ronald Mikos, a podiatrist, was convicted in May of 2005 of shooting Joyce Brannon in her church basement apartment to keep her from telling a federal grand jury how he defrauded Medicare. Prosecutors said he shot the nurse and former patient, who was disabled, six times at point-blank range.
Mikos was the last person sentenced to death in Illinois.
Biden said in a statement that he was commuting the death sentences of Mikos and 36 others because it was “consistent with the moratorium my administration has imposed on federal executions, in cases other than terrorism and hate-motivated mass murder.”
“In good conscience, I cannot stand back and let a new administration resume executions that I halted,” he added, referring to President-elect Donald Trump, an outspoken proponent of expanding capital punishment.
Mikos proclaimed he was innocent when he was sentenced in 2006, telling U.S. District Judge Ronald A. Guzman, “Your Honor, I did not kill Joyce Brannon.”
Mikos, 57, became only the second person sentenced to capital punishment in the history of Chicago’s Dirksen Federal Courthouse.
His attorneys had suggested at the trial that drug pushers might have hidden narcotics in Brannon’s apartment in a North Side church basement, returned to get them and murdered her.
But the jury found him guilty of murder as well as defrauding Medicare out of $1.8 million by billing it for thousands of foot operations he had never performed.
The jury recommended the death penalty despite testimony of psychiatrists that Mikos had numerous mental problems, including a schizotypal personality and photos that defense attorneys said showed that he had holes where brain tissue should be.
They said the severe brain degeneration might have been caused by abuse of alcohol and his frequent use of a potent prescription painkiller.
No members of Brannon’s family were present at the sentencing. But prosecutors released a letter in which her sister, Janet Bunch, said Mikos acted “out of greed and obviously low or no morals.”
“When he realized that he was caught and faced serious personal consequences for his greed, he chose to take a human life in a violent and merciless way. … I feel that Ronald Mikos forfeited any right to leniency when he planned and carried out the cold-blood execution of my sister.”
Mikos, meanwhile, continues to fight his conviction. In 2020, he filed a motion contending he was not competent to stand trial and that his lawyers were not effective. He also claimed that his death sentence violated the Eighth Amendment because of his mental illness.
In September of this year, a federal judge said some of Mikos’ contentions merited further review and ordered both sides in the case to meet on the issues he raised.
Associated Press contributed
Illinois
Kasparas Jakucionis scores 21, lifts Illinois over Missouri in thriller
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Kasparas Jakucionis scored 21 points, including the go-ahead basket with 28 seconds left and Illinois defeated Missouri 80-77 on Sunday in the annual Braggin’ Rights game between the nonconference rivals.
Illinois held the lead for nearly 30 minutes of game time, but a late rally by Missouri took the game down to the wire. An 11-0 run, capped by Trent Pierce’s layup gave the Tigers a 68-67 lead with about 4 minutes to go.
Jakucionis hit a straight-on 3-pointer for a 75-72 Illinois lead with 2 minutes remaining, but Missouri’s Tamar Bates hit a wide-open 3 in transition to tie it at 75 with 1:14 to go.
After the teams exchanged free throws, Jakucionis, a freshman who has six consecutive 20-point games, drove the right side of the line, stopped, pivoted and hit a turnaround jumper to put Illinois ahead 79-77 with 28 seconds left.
After a miss by Missouri, Kylan Boswell made one of two free throws for a three-point lead. Jacob Crews missed a 3-pointer that could have tied it for Missouri.
Boswell made 11 of 12 free throws and Jakucionis went 8 for 8 for Illinois, which was 22 of 23 from the line. Missouri made 28 free throws but shot only 76% from the line. There 43 total fouls in the game.
Boswell had 16 points, nine rebounds and five assists for Illinois (8-3). Tre White scored 13 and Tomislav Ivisic had 11 points and 10 rebounds.
Mark Mitchell and Tony Perkins scored 18 points each and Bates had 17 for Missouri (10-2), which saw its 10-game winning streak come to an end.
Illinois hosts Chicago State on Dec. 29 and Missouri hosts Alabama State on Dec. 30.
Illinois
Illinois Coach Brad Underwood Praises Mizzou After Braggin’ Rights Showdown
ST. LOUIS — After each of the last three Braggin’ Rights games between the Missouri Tigers and the Illinois Fighting Illini have been decided by 20 or more points, Illinois head coach Brad Underwood believes gave fans “a pretty good show” Sunday.
The game was tied at 72, 75 and 77 in the final 2:30 of play before Illinois finally created separation with a successful jump shot from Kasparas Jakucionis with 28 seconds remaining to secure a 80-77 win for Illinois.
“We kept our foot on the shovel and we kept digging,” Missouri head coach Dennis Gates said of Missouri’s performance in the final minutes. “That’s the sign of a good team.”
Illinois has been ranked as high as 19th in the AP Poll this season before falling out of the rankings on Dec. 9. The Tigers received more votes than Illinois in the most recent AP Poll, with both just outside of the top 25. But Sunday showed why both Missouri and Illinois could continue to rise throughout the remainder of the season.
“That’s two really good basketball teams,” Underwood said after the win for Illinois. “It makes this game another game that is great for college basketball.”
Being able to compete with a team as formidable as Illinois was not something the Tigers did often through the 2023-’24 season, going 0-18 in SEC play. But, Missouri is already starting to show signs of steering the ship back in the right direction. First with an upset win over Kansas on Dec. 8, and now with this performance against Illinois.
“Dennis does a fabulous job,” Underwood said. Coming off the year they had last year, is putting together a really good team.”
Sunday’s matchup was the 55th annual Braggin’ Rights showdown, host to a historic rivalry. Even with the loss, Missouri showed why they could reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time since the 2022-’23 season, Gates’ first year as the program’s head coach.
“When you get those two teams together, and you get them in the unique circumstances, you get a crowd like today, which, by the way, ours was fantastic,” Underwood said. “That’s an NCAA tournament team.”
Mizzou Loses at Buzzer to Illinois in Braggin’ Rights Game
Illinois
What I'm looking at: Illinois
What I’m looking at: Illinois
We’ve reached the second rivalry game as the Tigers (10-1) take on the Illinois Fighting Illini (7-3) in the annual Braggin’ Rights matchup in St. Louis.
Here’s what I’ll be keeping an eye on at noon at the Enterprise Center in St. Louis (ESPN).
Scouting Report
Illinois enters the 55th edition of the rivalry matchup and 43rd in St. Louis coming off a last-second 66-64 loss to No. 1 Tennessee.
The Illini have played a very tough schedule to this point, losing to No. 8 Alabama, No. 1 Tennessee and Northwestern in the Dec. 6 opener of Big 10 play, as well as beating No. 19 Arkansas and No. 20 Wisconsin.
There’s exactly one player on Illinois’ team who appeared in last year’s Braggin’ Rights matchup, 6-foot-1, 185-pound sophomore guard Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn, who played 3 minutes without a stat other than a missed shot in last year’s game and is averaging about 13.8 minutes per game, appearing in all 10 this season.
Otherwise, it’s a fully new Illini roster.
Freshman guard Kasparas Jakucionis (6-6, 205) has taken the lead for Illinois this year, scoring 16.1 points to go with 6.1 rebounds per contest and a team-high 5.6 assists per game. The do-it-all guard hits 42 percent of his attempts from 3 (21-of-50) and is tied for first on the team in makes from deep while being 10 attempts behind 6-9, 225-pound graduate forward Ben Humrichous, who has made 21-of-60 from deep.
Sophomore center Tomislav Ivisic (7-1, 255) who is from Croatia, is second on the team at 14.2 points per game to go with his near double-double average of 9.7 boards per contest. Freshman forward Will Riley (6-8, 195) adds 13.5 points and 4.2 rebounds per game, while 6-2, 205-pound junior guard Kylan Boswell scores 10.1 points per game to go with 4.1 rebounds per contest.
All four have played in all 10 games, though Riley has come off the bench in all 10.
The Illini have used the same starting 5 in every game with Jakucionis, Ivisic, Boswell, junior guard Tre White (6-7, 210) and Humrichous.
The Illini score 84 points a game and give up 64.6.
Illinois shoots 43.2 percent from the field, 32.4 percent from 3 and 73.5 percent from the free-throw line, while allowing opponents to shoot 36.9/23.9/61.5.
Illinois leads the all-time series 34-20 and holds a 26-16 advantage for matchups in St. Louis, including a 97-73 win last season. But the Illini hold just a 6-4 lead in the past 10 games.
Matchups
Mizzou’s perimeter defense vs. Jakucionis
The Tigers allow opponents to shoot just 33.2 percent from beyond the arc, which is surprisingly low considering the amount of open looks it feels like the Tigers give up every game.
Jakucionis comes in firing from deep. If Mizzou leaves him open, there’s going to be some major issues, especially if he hits a few early.
The Tiger defense needs to stay locked on Kajucionis around the perimeter as much as possible. He’s definitely a major threat closer to the basket, too, but a few early, open 3s could give the Illini the momentum and the Tigers need to take it early and run with it like they did in the Border War.
Mizzou’s defense forcing turnovers
We’re sticking with the defense with the second matchup.
The Illini commit 11.2 turnovers a game and force only 10.4, so Illinois is running a deficit game-to-game.
For the Border War, I said one of the routes to a win was the Tiger defense forcing a lot of early turnovers and building a lead, then holding onto the momentum. That’s the same case here and the 2022 Braggin’ Rights matchup is the prime example to look at.
If Mizzou is able to play in transition early and get some easy looks, that sets the Tigers up about as well as possible against a team they don’t necessarily match up well with.
Josh Gray vs. Tomislav Ivisic
This one is just interesting to me.
Watching two talented 7-footers battle it out in the post is always fun. I think Ivisic is the type of post player that’s going to go right at Gray more than Hunter Dickinson did, so another game where Gray makes a big, immediate difference in the post could go a long way to the Tigers getting their 11th consecutive win.
What I’m looking for
Has to be a quick start like we saw in the Border War.
If the Tigers are going to win both of their rivalry games this year, they have the formula and showed they can do it.
They don’t need a 29-point night from Tamar Bates again, though that would be a good way to keep the offense moving, but there’s going to have to be a big offensive night from somebody.
Both teams like to play in transition, which is going to lead to some turnovers, if the Tigers are able to take advantage and force Illinois into some early ones that lead to easy buckets, that’s the best setup Mizzou can have for this game.
And once again, gotta try to keep away that offensive lull. It’s probably going to happen at some point, we see it just about every game. The Tigers pulled out the win against kansas because they built up a big enough lead to withstand a long lull.
That’s a lot to ask them to do again, so instead, how about we ask for a shorter lull. Maybe only five minutes instead of 13 where the offense looks awful.
No lull at all would be fantastic, but feels like too big of an ask at this point until we see them go without one against a good team.
And just for my sake:
I already have one of my favorite coverage assignments I’ve gotten to experience in this year’s Border War. The 2022 version of Braggin’ Rights is another one that’s up there for me because it was my first time covering a game courtside and the way that game went, I could feel the energy from the Mizzou side of the arena all night.
I was sent up to the top of the arena for last year’s game and it definitely affected the experience, but I got confirmation Friday that I’m back on the floor this year, so hopefully the Tigers can give me a second of my favorite games I’ve ever covered in the same basketball season.
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