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
Man buys winning $1.3 million jackpot ticket at suburban gas station
OSWEGO, Ill. (WLS) — A Chicago-area man claimed a $1.3 million jackpot prize during an ordinary stop at a local gas station.
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The newly-minted millionaire said he bought the ticket while stopping to buy a drink.
“‘Why not?’” the winner said. “I played a Quick Pick, and it turned out to be a lucky day.”
His ticket matched all five numbers in the Thursday, June 11 evening Lucky Day Lotto drawing. The winning numbers were 1-13-19-27-35.
The ticket was purchased at Oswego BP, located at 2791 US Highway 34.
Overjoyed, he wasted no time sharing the big news with his wife.
“She was thrilled,” he said. “It’s funny-I actually won a $45,000 prize playing this same game 15 years ago when it was called Little Lotto.”
The winner plans to use the prize money to buy a new house and secure his and his wife’s retirement.
For selling the, the Oswego BP will receive a bonus of $13,000.
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Illinois
Illinois could face new costs because of high error rate in SNAP food aid
Illinois
Beckman’s new Illinois Polymer Maker Lab commissions first instrument
The Illinois Polymer Maker Lab, Beckman’s newest core facility, will open soon in the institute’s basement. The lab will be the first-of-its-kind facility for the automated formulation and testing of polymer-based materials and will soon be open to researchers across campus and across the nation.
The lab will help researchers accelerate the development of materials and products related to paints and coatings, adhesives, personal care items, composites, and materials for 3D printing. It could also help researchers design resins for energy-efficient manufacturing and products in the food science industry. It’s funded by a Major Research Instrumentation grant from the National Science Foundation.
“The core capabilities will be pretty unique,” said Dan Krogstad, the lab’s manager and a research professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. “The IPML facility at Beckman provides researchers with an incredible opportunity to accelerate the development of polymer-based formulations through the creation of rich, digital datasets using automated equipment and workflows.”
The lab joins four other Beckman core research facilities: the Biomedical Imaging Center, Microscopy Suite, Molecular Imaging Lab and Visualization Lab.
“The Illinois Polymer Maker Lab is another example of how Beckman provides cutting-edge facilities that you can’t find anywhere else,” said Beckman Director Steve Maren. “This facility will fuel materials discovery for our researchers and especially allow them to push the boundaries of knowledge through AI.”
The Anton Paar high-throughput rheometer, an HTR 7000, was the first instrument to be installed in IPML earlier this spring. It’s a robotic instrument capable of dispensing polymers and measuring their flow behavior automatically.
For example, the rheological properties tell us whether a paint will drip after being applied to a surface, how easy it is to squeeze toothpaste out of a tube or how well the materials will flow through pipes in a factory.
However, while the rheological properties are important in the development of new materials, collecting related data can require a lot of time. High-throughput systems, like IMPL’s Anton Paar HTR 7000, help overcome this limitation.
Sam Tawfick, a co-leader of the Autonomous Materials Systems group, said his Beckman research colleagues are researching how to better manufacture advanced materials through 3D printing or resins for polymers reinforced with carbon fibers
“The flow behavior of polymers is critical to assess their manufacturability,” said Tawfick, the Anderson Family Scholar and professor of mechanical science and engineering, adding that the IPML rheometer’s usefulness is in how it dispenses polymers and automatically measures their flow.
“This changes the students’ workflow in the lab by minimizing sample preparation steps and enabling the equipment to run and take measurements 24 hours a day, seven days a week. For the students, this means higher productivity and the ability to focus on interpretation of the results.”
Beyond reducing the time required, automating rheological measurements promotes machine learning by making procedures more uniform, creating organized digital datasets and increasing the amount of data that can be collected.
Tawfick believes access to the lab will have incredible implications for both expanding knowledge and offering new materials to the public.
“I personally think students will achieve more during the same timeline of a Ph.D. or postdoctoral training, connecting more dots around their discovery and tightening both the scientific understanding and the reliability of their discoveries,” he said.
In the past, it’s taken up to 20 years for a new polymer, like a high temperature resistant silicone or high strength composite, to be ready for commercial use. Material readiness is ranked on a scale (called the Technology Readiness Level, or TRL) between 0 and 9, the latter which describes a material that’s commercially established.
“It takes about 10 years to move the concept of a material from TRL 0 to TRL 3 in a lab,” Tawfick said. “IPML is targeting this stage, with the aim of shortening it from a decade to potentially weeks.”
And because the lab will be a Beckman core facility, knowledge can transfer among users thanks to the help of expert staff members and the creation of institutional knowledge, Tawfick said.
“Groups from campus and external users from the private sector will benefit from and contribute to this institutional knowledge,” he said. “This will be accomplished by gradually optimizing the workflows and the AI models used in the facility.”
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