Vote Rent One Park as the Best Independent League Stadium

MARION, IL – Rent One Park, home of your Southern Illinois Miners, is in the sweet sixteen! That’s right, Rent One Park has been voted to the sweet sixteen of Ballparkdigest.com’s Best of Ballparks: Independent Baseball. And now we need YOUR HELP!

Visit ballparkdigest.com to vote for Rent One Park and help us get into the Elite 8. Right now, we are neck and neck against the Southern Maryland Bluecrabs! Thanks for all who have voted so far and let’s keep on voting!

And don’t forget to visit Rent One Park for our next homestand on June 30th-July 2nd

50 INFLUENCERS OF RLC: BENTON ATTORNEY BRYAN DREW, PRECEDENT OF COMMUNITY CONNECTION

Reece Rutland – Rend Lake College Public Information/Sports Information Director

“Homegrown” is an idea that permeates the history of Rend Lake College. The college has seen former students transition into professors, coaches, staff members and even a president. More than a few such examples have appeared in this series, each helping shape RLC in their own way.

This week’s 50 influencer is no exception.

Benton native Bryan Drew first came to the Ina campus as a distinguished student and a noteworthy golfer.

Bryan Drew – (Photo Provided) by RLC

An All-Region XXIV honoree, Drew never was a medalist during his Juco career but was runner-up four times. The golf team won six of 13 tournaments and ascended to its first-ever No. 1 National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) ranking in any sport. Academically, Drew was recognized for his outstanding GPA and work inside the classroom. Drew was named RLC co-‘Student Athlete of the Year,’ sharing the honor with Roby Houghlan (Herrin).

The Class of 95 graduate was inducted, along with his team, into the RLC Sports Hall of Fame thanks to the key role he played on the Men’s Golf Team which finished as runner-up in the NJCAA Division II National Championships.

Following his time at RLC, Drew went on to play golf for St. Louis University and earned a Bachelor’s Degree in History. Following his undergraduate degree, he moved on to graduate from the Saint Louis University School of Law. He received his license to practice law in the State of Illinois in 2000. But, he never forgot his roots or the importance of RLC in not only his life but that of his family.

“Myself, my mom, my dad and my brother all got our start with college at Rend Lake,” Drew said during the Rend Lake College Foundation’s 2012 Annual Dinner.

“We all went there under different circumstances, but all got the start we needed to move forward. My father was the first in his family to go to college and so was my mother in her family. So, Rend Lake made a lot possible for our family. It’s important to our family to give kids the good beginning to college that we all had.”

The Drew family has also put action to those words, earning the RLCF’s Bronze Major Gift Award for their support of RLC students, including the John D. and S.L. Cookie Drew Scholarship. The scholarship honors Drew’s mother, who lives in Benton, and the memory of his father, John D. Drew, a longtime Benton Attorney who passed away in 2009.

“He thought a great deal of Rend Lake,” Bryan said of his father. “This is a small way for our family to make sure the name John D. Drew continues to help people like the man did when he was alive.”

Drew has made a lasting impact with the college in more ways than as a student-athlete and Foundation benefactor.

He came back.

He joined his father in 2000 at the family-based firm Drew & Drew, P.C. Attorneys-at-Law and has been at the firm ever since. The firm specializes in criminal defense, personal injury, employment law, divorce, custody and civil litigation.

It was from that platform that Drew got the call on Nov. 16, 2005 that he was appointed to fill the RLC Board of Trustees seat vacated by another Benton resident, Courtney Cox, after his resignation.

Following his appointment, Drew was then elected to the board in 2007 and again in 2013. During his time on the board, he served three years as chair, a position he occupied during the last change in the RLC President’s Office.

He also acted as the keynote speaker during Rend Lake College’s 45th Annual Commencement Ceremony.

Drew resigned from the board during his third year as chair to devote more time to family and work obligations.

“I have enjoyed helping the college during my term on the Board, through what have been trying economic times in Illinois,” Drew said at his final board meeting. “The President and administration have done an excellent job and I believe the Board has placed an excellent group of individuals in charge of the college. It has been my pleasure to work alongside President (Terry) Wilkerson and my fellow Board members, and I look forward to seeing Rend Lake College continue to grow and provide a great education to the people of Southern Illinois.”

Wilkerson thanked Drew for his service, “We certainly appreciate everything Bryan has done for Rend Lake College in his time on the board. He has a true love of this college and enjoys seeing it grow and succeed. It’s been a real benefit to have him on our Board.”

Yet, Drew stepping away from the Board of Trustees didn’t signal an end to his relationship with the college.

In May of 2014, the board appointed him as Board Attorney to help the college navigate all legal matters.

It’s a testament to the impact of the college, the dedication former Warriors display towards future generations of RLC graduates. Drew is an embodiment of that through his family’s giving to scholarships, the decisions he made while on the board of trustees and his continued service as the college’s legal counsel.

Through the service of outstanding community members like Drew, the college hopes to cultivate more “homegrown” leaders who display the same resolve to better the lives of those around them.

 

Wertz’s Walk-Off Shot Vaults Miners To Comeback Win

From The Southern Illinois Miners

MARION, IL – The Southern Illinois Miners were down 8-2 in the bottom of the seventh inning, and trailed 8-6 down to their final out in the bottom of the ninth before Kurt Wertz, Jr. launched a walk-off, three-run home run to left-center field as the Miners beat the Lake Erie Crushers in dramatic fashion 9-8 on Saturday night at Rent One Park.

The game went back and forth in the first as Jordan Dean’s solo home run put the Crushers on top 1-0, but Southern Illinois responded with two runs in the bottom of the first on RBI doubles by Ryan Lashley and Wertz to take a 2-1 lead. That lead would hold up until the third inning, when Dean stroked a two-run home run to left to put Lake Erie in front 3-2. With both starters in Corey Sessions and Jordan Kurokawa settling down in the ensuing frames, the score remained 3-2 until the fifth, when a two-run homer by Sean Hurley gave the Crushers a 5-2 advantage.

Lake Erie added on three more runs in the top of the seventh inning to lead 8-2 at the seventh-inning stretch before the Miners began their comeback. Wertz led off the bottom of the seventh with a double, and scored two batters later on a Justin Chigbogu RBI triple. Ben Moore followed with a double to right field to bring home a second run and make it 8-4 before London Lindley‘s subsequent single brought Moore home and drew the Miners within 8-5. Southern Illinois would load the bases with no one out in the eighth, but fail to score, setting up a dramatic bottom of the ninth inning.

Lindley bounced a single over the drawn-in infield to lead off against Crushers closer Chandler Jagodzinski (0-2), and after a flyout for the first out, Brett Wiley reached on an infield hit to put runners at first and third base for Lashley, who singled to left field to make it 8-6 Crushers and put the tying run on base. After a strikeout for the second out of the inning, Wertz drove a 1-1 pitch over the left-center field wall for the first walk-off homer by a Miners batter since September 4th, 2015 as Southern Illinois clinched the series with the come-from-behind victory.

Wertz finished the game 3-for-4 with two doubles, his walk-off homer, a walk, two runs scored and four RBIs, while Lashley went 2-for-4 with two runs scored, a double and two RBIs of his own. Wiley went 2-for-5 with two runs scored in his Miners debut, while Moore and Lindley also had two hits, a run and an RBI apiece in the contest.

The Miners will now go for a sweep in the final game of their homestand against the Crushers on Sunday at 5:05 p.m., with Tyler Stubblefield on the mound facing the Crushers’ Juan Caballero.

The Southern Illinois Miners are the 2016 Frontier League West Division Champions, the 2014 and 2015 Frontier League East Division Champions and the 2012 Frontier League Champions. They have been awarded the Frontier League Organization of the Year award three times since their inception, and also set a new Frontier League attendance record in 2007, their inaugural season. For ticket information, contact the Rent One Park box office at (618) 998-8499. For any additional information, visit our website at www.southernillinoisminers.com.

Box Score

Batting Stats

Lake Erie
# Batter P AB R H RBI BB SO AVG
8 Oliver, C CF 4 1 0 0 1 2 .222
20 Dean, J 2B 5 3 3 3 0 1 .260
24 Murray, B DH 5 1 1 1 0 2 .276
12 Lenahan, C 3B 4 1 1 0 1 1 .232
15 Hurley, S LF 5 1 1 2 0 2 .250
6 McAdams, J 1B 4 1 1 0 0 1 .242
3 Norris, P RF 3 0 2 1 1 0 .238
32 Lubach, T C 1 0 0 0 0 1 .188
34   Oliver, B C 3 0 1 0 0 0 .162
4 Casper, M SS 3 0 1 0 1 0 .188
37 8 11 7 4 10

Batting
2B: B.Murray (4).  3B: P.Norris (1).  HR: J.Dean 2 (6), S.Hurley (6).
RBI: J.Dean 3 (15), B.Murray (5), S.Hurley 2 (19), P.Norris (8).
CS: C.Oliver (5), M.Casper (1).  SB: C.Oliver (11).  Team LOB: 6.

Fielding  A: J.Dean 4 (89), C.Lenahan (42), B.Oliver (10), M.Casper 3 (68).  DP: 1 (J. Dean(2B) – M. Casper(SS) – J. McAdams(1B)).  FCS: B.Oliver (1).  PB: B.Oliver (1).  PO: C.Oliver 5 (66), C.Lenahan (18), S.Hurley 3 (46), J.McAdams 7 (179), T.Lubach (195), B.Oliver 7 (88), M.Casper 2 (37).  SBA: B.Oliver (15).  TC: C.Oliver 5 (74), J.Dean 4 (150), C.Lenahan 2 (68), S.Hurley 3 (49), J.McAdams 7 (188), T.Lubach (217), B.Oliver 8 (99), M.Casper 5 (107).

S Illinois
# Batter P AB R H RBI BB SO AVG
23 Massey, C LF
SS
4 0 0 0 1 0 .294
6 Wiley, B 2B 5 2 2 0 0 1 .400
19 Lashley, R 3B 4 2 2 2 1 1 .246
27 Flores, M LF 3 0 0 0 0 1 .218
25   Martin, W PH 0 0 0 0 1 0 .292
26   Plant, C PR
SS
1 0 0 0 0 1 .306
8 Wertz Jr., K DH 4 2 3 4 1 1 .333
15 Earley, N RF 3 0 0 0 1 1 .228
41 Chigbogu, J 1B 4 1 1 1 0 1 .252
7 Moore, B C 4 1 2 1 0 0 .221
2 Lindley, L CF 4 1 2 1 0 0 .302
36 9 12 9 5 7

Batting
2B: R.Lashley (4), K.Wertz Jr. 2 (2), B.Moore (2).  3B: J.Chigbogu (2).
HR: K.Wertz Jr. (4).  RBI: R.Lashley 2 (21), K.Wertz Jr. 4 (8), J.Chigbogu (19), B.Moore (6), L.Lindley (8).  CS: B.Moore (1).
Team LOB: 6.

Fielding  A: C.Massey 3 (70), B.Wiley 4 (4), R.Lashley 4 (40), B.Moore 2 (11), C.Sessions (6).  CS: B.Moore 2 (2).  DP: 1 (B. Wiley(2B) – R. Lashley(3B) – J. Chigbogu(1B)).  E: B.Wiley (1), J.Chigbogu (4).  PO: C.Massey 2 (59), B.Wiley 3 (3), N.Earley (49), J.Chigbogu 10 (218), B.Moore 10 (174), L.Lindley (78).  SBA: B.Moore 3 (35).  TC: C.Massey 5 (130), B.Wiley 8 (8), R.Lashley 4 (57), N.Earley (52), J.Chigbogu 11 (237), B.Moore 12 (186), L.Lindley (79), C.Sessions (9).

Pitching Stats

Lake Erie
# Pitcher IP H R ER BB SO ERA
36 Kurokawa, J 6.0 4 2 2 1 4 2.64
19 Sinibaldi, J 1.0 4 3 3 1 1 5.82
28 Lucio, S 1.0 0 0 0 3 1 3.27
29   Jagodzinski, C 0.2 4 4 4 0 1 4.26
8.2 12 9 9 5 7

Pitching  BF: J.Kurokawa 22, J.Sinibaldi 8, S.Lucio 5, C.Jagodzinski 6.
P-S: J.Kurokawa 89-54, J.Sinibaldi 22-14, S.Lucio 28-13, C.Jagodzinski 22-14.

S Illinois
# Pitcher IP H R ER BB SO ERA
18 Sessions, C 5.2 6 5 5 3 6 4.62
10 Lollar, J 1.0 4 3 3 1 0 8.10
32 Knaus, K 1.0 1 0 0 0 1 15.00
21 Winning Pithcer  Dubsky, A 1.1 0 0 0 0 3 2.46
9 11 8 8 4 10

Pitching
BF: C.Sessions 26, J.Lollar 8, K.Knaus 3, A.Dubsky 4.
P-S: C.Sessions 94-56, J.Lollar 20-11, K.Knaus 15-10, A.Dubsky 19-11.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Lake Erie 1 0 2 0 0 2 3 0 0 8 11 0
S Illinois 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 4 9 12 2

 

 

State Police: Don’t break car windows to rescue hot dogs

https://www.ilnews.org/news/statewide/state-police-don-t-break-car-windows-to-rescue-hot/article_7176afd8-514b-11e7-8152-a7a9710e10db.html?utm_medium=social

(Benjamin Yount, Illinois News Newtork.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt.)

Illinois State Police says do not take matters in your own hands when you see a pet trapped in a car. Call law enforcement immediately. (Shuttercock photo)

You hear the warning every summer, don’t leave your dog in a hot car. But the Illinois State Police have a new warning about trying to rescue those hot dogs: don’t break into a car to save it.

Illinois State Police Master Sergeant Jason Bradley said this is the time of years when people get very concerned about animals left inside cars.

Bradley said leaving a dog in a hot car can be a crime. But it is absolutely a crime for someone to break a car’s window, regardless of why.

West Frakfort police/fire have a very busy May

From West Frankfort City Commissioner Tara Chambers

Spencer Metro, receiving a Blue Lives Matter American flag signed by several law enforcement officers in the county last fall. (Shared from Tara Chambers Facebook page)

What’s going on at the WFPD? According to Chief Irwin, quite a bit for the month of May. West Frankfort Police Officers responded to a whopping 2077 calls for the month, including 47 calls for traffic accidents, 12 of those accidents involving injuries. There were 258 traffic stops and 92 citations issues for the month of May, as well and 87 adult arrests made with 60 criminal charges resulting.

On the other end of WFFD and WFPD’s busy day is the dispatchers that make it all possible. West Frankfort Dispatchers do a fantastic job and work harder than most realize, answering 4916 calls for the month of May alone, including 721 9-1-1 emergency calls and 258 walk-in requests being answered.

Growing up in T’ville with Ol’ Ugly

by Steve Dunford

Kendell Marvel at Old Setter Days in Galatia back in May. (Thank you for the photo, Mary Beth Puckett.)

Ol’ Ugly will be taking the state tonight at Black Diamond Harley Davidson, along side Herrin native David Lee Murphy who has had a very successful country music career, and highlighting the event will be country music superstar Toby Keith.

Ol’ ugly is successful country music songwriter Kendell Marvel, who has written songs for Gary Allen, Blake Shelton, Jake Owen, Jamey Johnson, Joe Diffie, Lee Ann Womack, Trace Adkins, Darius Rucker,  Tracy Lawrence and Josh Turner.  There might be some that I have forgotten about.

Right now the latest hit he wrote, Either Way by Chris Stapleton is getting a lot of air play on country radio.

How we started calling each other Ol’ ugly I do not know. That is just what referred to each other as.  I just know he is much more successful and tons better looking than I am.

I remember him as a kid in the rival town of Galatia, packing around a guitar that was bigger than him.

I also remember him in junior high as a cocky little runt who was the point guard for their basketball team.  I was an overgrown kid, that current West Frankfort Basketball coach Kevin Toney referred to as man child.   He was a young coach at Mulkeytown then.  I had chest hairs sticking out of my uniform, and could have grown a full beard if my mom would have let me.

We (Thompsonville)  were playing at Galatia my 8th grade year.  They were 30 points better than us, but Jerry Warren our coach at the time, showed his McLeansboro roots by having us play their style of ball.

It was early in the 4th quarter and we were winning 14-12.  The little runt was driving on a fast break, it was a rare occasion, but I got back on defense.  I sent his shot into the second row of the Junior High gym in Galatia.  He walked a way with his team having an OT win.  I walked away with a broken right thumb and fore finger.

I was 5′ 10″ at the time and Kendell was probably 4′ 11″ on his tiptoes.  A lot of people thought I would end up 6′ 4″ or 6′ 5″.  I grew a little over an inch.  Kendell was the one that ended up that tall.

At the start of my sophomore year, Kendell started going to school at Thompsonville.  He is from the booming metropolis of West End.  His house sit right on the Saline-Franklin county line.  I have heard all kinds of theories why he transferred. but I think a girl named Randa Kerley had something to do with it.  She is now his wife of nearly 30 years.

He immediately dethroned me as class clown, and I had to take the secondary role.  It was mandatory that we took a study hall.  Both of us made trips to the office during them.  We really never was in deep trouble, we were yelled at and sent back to class.  I had two different teachers tell me that he was funnier than you, but there were times they had to get rid of both of us because they were afraid they would bust out laughing.

All through high school he would be picking at festivals and honky-tonks around Southern Illinois.     He always had the entourage from T’ville and Galatia that followed him around.

One night that comes to mind, was he was playing at a fundraiser at a tavern down in Pope County, I believe it was around Eddyville.  Channel 3 happened to be there.  My mom was watching the news the next morning and I was woke up to her saying Stephen Duane come here.  I came close to going, but I went to a ball game somewhere instead.  I was interrogated for half the day asking if I went there.

We had our senior prom at the student center at Rend Lake College.  We had a live band, they were cocky, but they were terrible.  I remembered some in the band came up to the table that I was at and said how do you like our music?   I said I can get someone out of the crowd that can sing better than you all.

Randa was aggravated at him at first, but he strapped on the guitar and sang a few songs.  He got out of the doghouse by singing the Oak Ridge Boys song  Ill Be True to You, and dedicated it to her.  I went up to one of the disgusted band members and  said he wrote that for her.  He said “really”.  I was lying through my teeth, not realizing at the time he would be one of the top songwriters in country music.

A few weeks later from that event, we were both part of the Thompsonville High School class of 1988, all 26 of us.

A few years later, he was still singing and picking and followed his dream, embarking on a music career in Nashville.

In 2000, he had his breakthrough hit as a songwriter, Gary Allen’s Right Where I Need to Be. I heard the song a few times on the radio, but I did not realize he co-wrote it.  I was heading to work one morning, heard it on the radio, and right after that, Kent Zimmer and Juli Ingram interviewed him on Z-100.  I was thinking how cool I went to high school with the writer of the song.  I also thought that it was someone who pursued their dream, and was successful.

I have kept a close eye on his career, and went and heard him a few times at some festivals.  Every time we would cross paths.  Even though he has a lot of fame and fortune now, he has not changed one bit.  In the last several months of working on this website, some of the most popular posts comes from sharing he has been in an event, or videos of performances from him.

A little over a year ago, he came to church on Easter Sunday at Calvary Baptist Church, where I attend. His in-laws John and Terri Griffith attend there.  At the start of the service we all go around shaking hands.  I tapped Ol’ ugly on the shoulders.  Then he called me Ol’ Ugly, and hugged my neck.   I did some catching up with him and Randa after the service.  I was asked a few times why we called each other ugly that night at church.  To this day, I still don’t know.

A few weeks ago, I had the privilege of hearing him down at Old Settler Days at Galatia.  There were several hundred there form Thompsonville, or had Thompsonville ties.  I caught up with several people from Galatia that I hadn’t seen in years.   There were  He mentioned that he is glad the people from Galatia are still not mad at him for “switching over” to Thompsonville.

He mentioned on stage how when we played each other, how we would end up eating pizza together at Bondo’s in Galatia.  We couldn’t stand each other when the ball was tipped up, but we all became buddies again after the last horn sounded.   In fact, a young Doug Creel banned us from going to Galatia.  There was a little altercation on the stage at halftime my sophomore year at a game at Galatia.

As soon as we got off the bus, there was a convoy of vehicles making the 11 mile trip down Route 34.  We did not have a very fun practice Monday afternoon, that is when Bondo’s  and the whole town became a forbidden place.

I know there will be several of you attending.  Have fun tonight and stay safe.  He will be making appearances at Desoto and Harrisburg later in the year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mistrial declared in Bill Cosby sex assault case but retrial planned

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-people-cosby-idUSKBN1980B9

Actor and comedian Bill Cosby (C) reacts after a judge declared a mistrial in his sexual assault trial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pennsylvania, U.S., June 17, 2017. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

NORRISTOWN, PA (Joseph Ax – Reuters News Service.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

A Pennsylvania judge on Saturday declared a mistrial in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault case after the jury said it could not reach a verdict, but prosecutors said they would retry Cosby and he still faces a slew of civil lawsuits.

The jurors, who spent 53 hours debating whether Cosby was guilty or innocent, told Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas Judge Steven O’Neill they could not reach unanimous verdicts on whether Cosby was guilty of three counts of aggressive indecent assault against college administrator Andrea Constand at his home near Philadelphia in 2004.

 

SPC Upgrades Franklin County to a slight risk of Severe Weather

by Steve Dunford

The Storm Prediction Center in Norman OK has upgraded an area into a Murrphysboro, to Marion, to Harrisburg, to Carmi and points Northward to a slight risk (level 2 0f 5) of severe weather.

The storms will be in front of an advancing cold front which should go through sometime tomorrow morning.

It should be a rough day weather-wise in Southeast Iowa, and Central Missouri and Illinois.  These storms are expected to weaken after dark.  Two factors will determine the intensity of them when they arrive to our region sometime after midnight.  First is the intensity of the storms in the area mentioned, and second the energy that is in the atmosphere left from a very hot an humid day in Southern Illinois.

Storm direction this evening should be southeast.

As long as there is a threat in the region, I will keep an eye, providing updates during the overnight hours.

 

Franklin County Sheriff’s office arrest report 6/16/17

6-8-17 at 6:54 p.m. Deputies responded to a domestic dispute in rural Ewing that resulted in the arrest of Jamie E. Friar, 51, of Ina for aggravated assault.

6-9-17 at 5:11 pm Deputies took a complaint regarding the alleged violation of an order of protection. The investigation led to charges of unlawful violation of an order of protection being filed against Kevin M. Dillon Age 27 of Benton.

6-10-17 at 10:24 am a traffic stop in Benton led to the arrest of Merry M. Sinks Age 53 of Pittsburg for driving while license suspended.

6-11-17 at 12:07 am Deputies investigation of an illegally parked vehicle near Rend Lake led to the arrest of Kelsey A. Bate Age 23 of Valier for driving under the influence.

6-11-17 at 1:54 am a traffic stop near Rend Lake led to the arrest of William G. Murry Age 48 of Scheller for driving under the influence.

6-11-2017 at 7:47 am Deputies responded to a single vehicle traffic crash in rural Sesser. A 2008 Dodge Avenger driven by Ethan L. Bowlin Age 39 of Sesser was southbound when it traveled off the roadway and struck an embankment. Bowlin was the sole occupant and was initially transported to a local hospital with non-life threatening injuries. He was charged with driving under the influence, driving while license revoked, operating an uninsured motor vehicle, illegal transportation of alcohol and failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident.

6-13-17 at 9:32 am Deputies investigated a minor traffic crash in Thompsonville that led to charges of driving while license revoked against Roy D. Powell Age 68 of Thompsonville.

6-15-17 at 2:24 am Deputies responded to a domestic dispute in rural Benton that resulted in the arrest of Casey A. Lampley Age 36 of Benton of theft.

6-15-17 at 3:03 am Deputies responded to a single vehicle crash on ll. Rt. 14 just west of Rend City Road. A 2001 Chevrolet Pickup Truck driven by Michael A. Diuguid Age 21 of Zeigler was westbound on Rt. 14 when he lost control, ran off the roadway and overturned prior to striking a tree. Diuguid was the sole occupant and received major injuries. He was transported to a St. Louis area hospital. The investigation is ongoing and alcohol is believed to have been a factor. Several area Fire Departments also assisted at the scene along with Abbott’s EMS.

6-15-17 at 12:38 pm Deputies investigated a battery complaint that had occurred the previous day at a residence in Whittington. The investigation led to the arrest of David L. Woods Age 37 of Whittington for aggravated battery.

6-15-17 at 12:30 pm Deputies initiated an investigation of an alleged sexual assault in rural Benton. The investigation has led to the arrest of Lester R. Carter Age 49 of Benton. Carter is being held in the Franklin County Jail on aggravated criminal sexual assault (a class x felony) and unlawful production of 5-20 cannabis plants (a class 4 felony). These are tentative charges pending review by the States Attorney’s Office. The investigation is ongoing and more charges are possible.

WARRANTS

6-1-17 Christopher W. Lowery Age 37 of McLeansboro. Failure to appear on traffic charges.

6-10-17 Anthony J. Willis Age 49 of Centralia. Failure to appear on traffic charges.

6-12-17 Terry L. Griffin Age 37 of Salem. Failure to appear on D.U.I.

6-12-17 Mikalean H. D. Barr Age 23 of Carbondale. Unlawful delivery of a controlled substance.

6-12-17 Andrew C. Roberson Age 28 of West Frankfort. Failure to appear on traffic charges.

6-13-17 Aaron A. Hargett Age 18 of Benton. Failure to appear on traffic charges.

6-14-17 Brittani S. Anderson Age 30 of Herrin. Failure to appear on traffic charges.

One dead, two ‘armed and dangerous’ men at large in fatal Harrisburg shooting

http://www.dailyregister.com/news/20170616/one-dead-two-armed-and-dangerous-men-at-large-in-fatal-harrisburg-shooting

HARRISBURG, IL – (Travis DeNeal – Harrisburg Register.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

A Harrisburg man is dead and Harrisburg police are looking for two “armed and dangerous” suspects, after a Friday morning shooting in the 1400 block of South Granger Street.

According to sources close to the investigation, the dead man has been identified as Aaron Gregory. As word spread Friday morning, friends posted their condolences on his Facebook page.

The two men wanted in connection with the shooting have been identified by the same source as Xzavier Burnell Gibbs, 19, of 612 S. Jackson St. and Jarred R. Crawford, 30, of 314 N. Land St. – who already were the subject of a manhunt for more than a week, over a aggravated battery warrant.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News