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Brother, sister allege will executor failed to fairly distribute inheritance

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BELLEVILLE — Two siblings are suing a will executor, alleging deprivation of inheritance.

Sheila Skeel and John Dilday filed a lawsuit July 7 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against will executor Cathy Dilday, alleging she breached her duty to equally distribute the plaintiffs' inheritance.

According to the complaint, Skeel and Dilday have sustained financial damages of more than $50,000 for not receiving their inheritance share after the death of their mother, Guida Dilday, March 12, 2015. The plaintiffs allege Cathy Dilday refused to provide an explanation of what happened with their mother's assets, denied that there are assets to be distributed to the plaintiffs and used her position as agent under the power of attorney to change and re-title the assets.

Skeel and John Dilday seek trial by jury, judgment of more than $50,000 and such other relief the court deems just and proper. They are represented by attorneys Paul J. Evans and Benedict Y. Song of Evans Law Firm PC in O'Fallon.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 16-L-343


European Hispanics accuse Fairmont City of racial discrimination

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BELLEVILLE — Two Illinois residents of European Hispanic extraction are suing Fairmont City and other defendants, alleging racial discrimination.

Cheyenne C. Buneta and Terry Buneta filed a lawsuit July 7 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against Fairmont City, police officer Teresa Suarez, Rojas Vega, Francisco Barajas, Panlino Rosas and Miroslava Juarezda Baragos, alleging violation of the Illinois Civil Rights Act.

According to the complaint, the Bunetas, racially non-white Hispanics whose ancestors are from Europe, were subjected to discrimination because of their ancestry and origin and have been damaged in excess of $50,000. The plaintiffs allege the defendants conspired to interfere with the plaintiffs' soap business through illegal activity, including battery, assault and intimidating the plaintiffs' customers.

The Bunetas seek a trial by jury, judgment of more than $50,000, enjoining the defendants from committing acts of intimidation and harassment against the plaintiffs' customers or coming within 100 feet of either the plaintiffs or their customers. They are represented by attorney Thomas G. Maag of Maag Law Firm LLC in Wood River.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 16-L-345

Shareholders accuse company officers of theft

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BELLEVILLE — Two shareholders are suing family members and company officers, alleging intentional theft of money.

Robert G. Fournie, Sr. and Kenneth D. Fournie filed a lawsuit July 7 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against Fournie Contracting Company Inc., Karen Fournie and James Fournie, alleging the defendants conspired to usurp corporate opportunities.

According to the complaint, Robert Fournie, Sr. and Kenneth Fournie suffered monetary damages for not receiving dividends of more than $50,000. The plaintiffs allege the defendants converted and stole the assets and goodwill of their company, failed to observe corporate formalities and failed to pay dividends.

The plaintiffs seek trial by jury, an order for an accounting of the company to determine the actual amount of compensatory damages and an award of more than $50,000, plus punitive damages of more than $50,000 and legal costs. They are represented by attorneys Michael S. Williams and Kristi Vetri of Belleville.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 16-L-346

Madison County judge formed relationships with national asbestos firms after becoming judge

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SPRINGFIELD – Madison County associate judge Donald Flack formed litigation relationships with two national asbestos firms after taking the robe, according to his annual statements of economic interest at the Illinois Supreme Court.  
His statements since 2013 have disclosed relationships with Baron and Budd of Houston, Texas, and Simon, Eddins, and Greenstone of Long Beach, Calif.  
Flack didn’t disclose them on the first statement he filed, in 2012.  
All his statements have disclosed relationships with Thomas Q. Keefe Jr. of Belleville, David R. Jones of Edwardsville, Christopher Donohoo of East Alton, and the Perica law firm of Wood River.  
All his statements have disclosed an interest in “asbestos cases filed by Flack law office or Perica law firm before 5/25/12,” his first day as judge.  
His statements don’t identify the parties or the courts in those cases, nor do they specify the number of cases.  
At least 30 of them remain active in Madison County, including three that he filed after the announcement of his appointment as associate judge.  
Union Carbide has moved to dismiss all 30 for want of prosecution, and associate judge Stephen Stobbs plans a hearing on Aug. 3, at 9 a.m.  
Bob Perica took charge of the cases when Flack took the robe, and the New York City firm of Napoli Shkolnick later replaced Perica.  
Flack did not withdraw his appearances in any of the cases.  
In every case but one he filed an attorney’s lien, apparently still in force.  
His statements have disclosed litigation interests beyond asbestos.  
In 2012 and 2013, he listed Patterson v. Alton and Southern Railway; Dhue v. Premier Holdings; Zimmer v. Mastercars; Salmond-Williams v. Norman; Brown v. Scrap Solutions; Wilkinson v. McDonald’s; Harris v. Specialized Living Center and “McGee v. tree stand mfr.”  
He did not specify the courts handling those cases.  
In 2014, the list no longer included the cases of Patterson, McGee and Dhue.  
In 2015, the list no longer included the cases of Zimmer and Harris.  
This year’s list no longer included the Salmond-Williams case, leaving only Brown v. Scrap Solutions and Wilkinson v. McDonald’s as potential sources of income, as well as the asbestos cases.  
Flack’s current statement identifies the Perica firm as his wife’s employer, seasonal and part time.  
Previous statements identified the firm as her employer, without qualification.  
The current statement identifies Flack’s former firm, Korein Tillery, as his son’s employer from June to August last year.  
The Supreme Court’s statements of economic interest don’t obligate judges to report the amounts they receive from other sources.  
The Secretary of State’s office requires its own annual report, with a box to check if a judge earned more than $1,200 from an outside source. 
Flack has checked the box every year.  
The California firm he identified as Simon, Eddins, and Greenstone currently identifies itself as Simon Eddins Panatier Bartlett.        

Customer alleges grocery store owner's negligence caused injuries

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BELLEVILLE — A customer is suing a Belleville grocery store, alleging the defendant's negligence caused the plaintiff to sustain injuries.

Carol A. Brown filed a lawsuit July 8 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against Shop 'N Save Warehouse Foods Inc., alleging the grocery store owner was negligent in failing to exercise reasonable care to protect customers.

According to the complaint, on May 1, while Brown she was shopping at the defendant's store in Belleville, she fell on a liquid substance that had been spilled on the floor. The suit says the fall caused Brown to sustain bodily injuries that resulted in pain, disability, mental anguish, loss of earnings and medical expenses. 

The plaintiff alleges the defendant allowed the liquid to remain in the floor, failed to remove the liquid and failed to adequately warn customers.

Brown seeks a trial by jury, judgment of more than $50,000, plus costs of suit. She is represented by attorney Matthew J. Marlen of Belleville.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 16-L-347

Patient accuses medical care providers of negligence

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BELLEVILLE — A patient is suing medical providers, alleging their negligence led to the plaintiff sustaining injuries.

Shaun Milleson filed a lawsuit July 7 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against Dr. Gregory Randle and Human Utilization Experts Network LLC, alleging negligence in failing to perform an exam prior to surgery.

According to the complaint, on July 15, 2014, Milleson underwent kyphoplasty and suffered a permanent injury to his back. The suit says this caused him to sustain pain, mental anguish, disability, loss of normal life and medical expenses. 

The plaintiff alleges Randle failed to take Milleson's proper medical history, which would have revealed the plaintiff was improving, failed to continue conservative management and failed to obtain informed consent.

Milleson seeks trial by jury, judgment of more than $75,000, plus costs of suit. He is represented by attorney Thomas Q. Keefe III of Keefe, Keefe & Unsell PC in Belleville.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 16-L-344

Baricevic reversed over jury instructions in shooter’s attempted murder conviction

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MOUNT VERNON – St. Clair County Chief Judge John Baricevic must hold a new trial for a defendant in a shooting case after giving improper instructions, Fifth District appellate justices ruled on July 26. 

The justices reversed the conviction of Anthony Moore Jr., who faced a sentence of 34 years on charges of attempted murder and aggravated battery. 

They found Baricevic misstated the law by inserting the word “or” between his instructions on eyewitness testimony. 

They quoted the Illinois rule of criminal procedure he broke: “Do not use ‘or’ or ‘and’ between the factors where more than one factor is used.” 

The prosecution didn’t dispute the magnitude of the mistake. 

Justice Melissa Chapman wrote, “The state concedes that the eyewitness testimony instruction given by the trial court was erroneous, that the error was not harmless, and that the defendant is entitled to a new trial.” 

Justices Gene Schwarm and Bruce Stewart concurred. 

Cahokia police arrested Moore on Dec. 20, 2012, and charged him with firing three shots at Jasmine Bradley, age 15. 

At trial the next July, Bradley testified that friend Victoria Walker stopped her van to pick up Moore. 

“Walker and the defendant had a child together,” Chapman wrote. 

Bradley testified that Moore threatened to kill her for snitching. 

According to her testimony, she heard him discuss a robbery of a UPS truck. 

Walker had told him to stop talking because there were too many witnesses around. 

Bradley said Walker had hair extensions, boots and hats at her home after the robbery. 

She said Moore snatched her out of the van and threw her in a ditch. 

She said she saw and heard him fire three shots, the first missing her and the others striking her in her back and at the base of her skull. 

She said she heard Walker say she was dead and they should go. 

She went home and called 911. 

At a hospital, she said she gave Cahokia police extensions that Walker had placed in her hair. 

Chapman wrote that on cross examination, it was elicited that Bradley “has had juvenile issues, was bipolar, and had been unmedicated for some time.” 

Cahokia police captain David Landmann testified that when he arrived at her home, she told him she got out of the van and started running. 

He said she told him that she heard gunshots behind her, she ran home, and then she realized she had been shot. 

He said she told him she didn’t see a gun. 

Police lieutenant Dennis Plew testified that at the hospital, she said she was pulled from the car. 

Plew said she told him that she saw and heard the gun go off, and that she saw Moore shoot her in the back. 

He said she told him she played dead after the third shot. 

No one else identified Moore as the shooter. 

Baricevic told jurors, “When you weigh the identification testimony of a witness, you consider all the facts and circumstances in evidence including but not limited to the following.” 

He correctly delivered the first fact or circumstance by saying, “The opportunity the witness had to view the offender at the time of the offense.” 

Then he said, “Or the witness’s degree of attention at the time of the offense.” 

Then, “Or the witness’s earlier description of the offender.” 

Then, “Or the level of certainty shown by the witness when confronting the defendant.” 

Then, “Or the length of time between the offense and the identification confrontation.” 

Public defender Patrick Sullivan objected, and Baricevic overruled the objection. 

Sullivan didn’t even need to object, according to Chapman, because Baricevic committed plain error. 

She found Moore’s case similar to People v. Herron, a Supreme Court decision in a case of plain error from 2005. 

“In the present case, as in Herron, there was a singular witness to identify the perpetrator, this singular witness’s story changed, and there was no physical evidence presented at trial to indicate that Moore was the shooter,” Chapman wrote. 

Chapman quoted from the Herron decision that, “If the instruction initially directs the jurors to consider all the facts and circumstances surrounding the identification, but then, through the use of the conjunction ‘or,’ directs jurors to consider one of five factors regarding the reliability of the identification, then the instruction contains an internal inconsistency.” 

She quoted its declaration that such instructions are ambiguous and misleading. 

First District appellate defender Patricia Nysza of Chicago represented Moore on appeal, and Fifth District appellate defender David Robinson represented the state. 

Early in July, Fifth District judges had granted a new trial to a domestic battery suspect in Baricevic's court for failing to explain the four principles of a fair trial to potential jurors. 

Justice Judy Cates wrote that Baricevic collapsed the second principle into the first and collapsed the third and four principles into the second. 

Baricevic had sentenced the defendant, Andre Jackson, to 60 days in prison and 18 months on probation. 

Illinois tax code punishes entrepreneurs

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Entrepreneurship is the embodiment of the American Dream, and through their creativity and hard work, entrepreneurs bring new ideas, products and ways of doing things to the marketplace, often building businesses generating significant numbers of jobs. Fostering entrepreneurship is especially important for Illinois, which has experienced lackluster jobs growth and an unemployment rate that surpasses those of its neighbors. Yet, Illinois punishes, rather than encourages, entrepreneurs through its corporate franchise tax, death tax and limited liability company, or LLC, startup filing fees.

Lawmakers should repeal these taxes and slash LLC fees to make Illinois a welcome home for entrepreneurs and the jobs they create.

Eliminate the corporate franchise tax

The corporate franchise tax makes Illinois one of only two states explicitly taxing “paid-in” capital of new corporations. Mississippi repealed its corporate franchise tax this year, meaning it’s now only Illinois and Alabama that tax the paid-in capital of entrepreneurs. This tax harms entrepreneurship in several ways:

- The cost of compliance is high relative to the revenue raised. Compliance might even cost the economy more in lost productivity than the tax raises in revenue.
- The tax is far more burdensome for smaller businesses and start-ups than it is for established corporations.
- It taxes investments in Illinois in a perverse way, which drives away job-creating investments.
- The tax is extremely outdated and makes Illinois appear slow to adapt public policy to the modern economy – which is not a good image for a state seeking to attract innovators and new businesses.

Repeal the death tax

And Illinois’ estate tax, better known as the “death tax,” also hurts entrepreneurs and their businesses. The death tax in Illinois takes 16 percent of the estate of wealthier individuals beyond a certain exemption. It is an obvious driver of out-migration of wealthy business owners. No Southern state has a death tax, because they know wealthy retirees don’t want to move to states with death taxes. The estate tax takes a chunk of a productive working business assets or a farm and turns it into a one-time cash grab by the government.

Not many states maintain an estate tax, and several states have repealed theirs in the last decade. Reasons to repeal the estate tax include the following:

- It’s an obvious driver of out-migration of wealthier families and business owners. The tax can easily be avoided by moving businesses and wealth out of the state.
- The tax is unfair to farmers who can’t avoid it, and it breaks up family farms.
- The tax costs Illinois jobs when businesses and business assets move over the border to avoid it.
- It amounts to double taxation because it falls on businesses and assets that have already been taxed at the income tax level. This is unfair and creates an excessive drag on the state economy.

Slash LLC fees


Illinois has ridiculously high LLC start-up fees. The high-fee schedule brings in little revenue for the state, but it puts up a huge red flag for entrepreneurs. Those who do start an LLC in Illinois are punished with a $500 fee just to file their papers, and are hit up for another $250 per year every year after that, simply to continue filing forms with the state. The combined start-up and annual filing fee in Illinois is $750, far and away higher than the same combined-fee schedule in surrounding states. These fees should be dramatically slashed for several reasons.

- Illinois LLC fees are simply anti-poor. It’s easy for a rich entrepreneur to pay them, but it’s difficult for a poor entrepreneur to cough up $500 just to file papers.
- The ridiculous LLC-fee schedule makes Illinois look especially unfriendly compared to neighboring states.
- A fair fee for filing paperwork should be the cost for the state of processing that paperwork.
- This is one of the easiest changes Illinois can make to foster entrepreneurship.

Illinois needs to keep the overall tax burden as low as possible to relieve its already over-burdened families and business community. In addition, the way Illinois taxes and collects fees should be fixed, starting with rolling back the parts of the tax code that punish entrepreneurs. The way to do that is to eliminate the corporate franchise tax, repeal the death tax and slash LLC fees.

Madison County civil docket Aug. 9-12

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Story Copy
Tuesday, August 9

10:00 AM

WOODWORTH JUSTIN V. WILLIAMS ANDREW
15-L-001264, CROWDER 320

Wednesday, August 10

9:00 AM

HUGHES VINCE V. SUTTON MICHAEL SUPERINTENDENT
16-L-000528, HARRISON 247

IRWIN BRIAN A DISABLED PERSON V. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILWAY CO
15-L-001531, MUDGE 302

1:30 PM

FIRST CLOVER LEAF BANK SUC IN V. GARDNER TAMMY
08-L-000310, HARRISON 247

FIRST CLOVER LEAF BANK SUC IN V. GARDNER TAMMY
08-L-000311, HARRISON 247

Thursday, August 11

9:00 AM

MILLER MICHAEL V. OVERMEYER MARK A
09-L-001057, MUDGE 302

Friday, August 12

8:30 AM

DANHEISER RHONDA V. LEFFERT FRANK
14-L-000455, BARBERIS 230

SIPES KATHRYN V. LEFFERT FRANK
14-L-000476, BARBERIS 230

9:00 AM

FULMER MALINDA V. MARSHALL DEBORAH
16-L-000210, MATOESIAN 351

TIPSWORD ALLAN V. SOUTHWESTERN ELECTRIC COOPERAT
12-L-000901, RUTH 311

HUGHES VINCE V. SUTTON MICHAEL SUPERINTENDENT
16-L-000528, RUTH 311

HEINEMAN LACEY IND AND AS ADMI V. ROBINSON MICHAEL
16-L-000631, RUTH 311

BAUER BRENT V. PHILLIPS 66 COMPANY
16-L-000728, RUTH 311

PARENTE DOLORES V. GLEN CARBON DEVELOPMENT LLC
15-L-001163, RUTH 311

TERRY SANDRA V. TMCI INC AN ILLINOIS CORP
13-L-001563, RUTH 311

MORGAN SHIRLEY AS SPECIAL ADMI V. BROCKMAN WILLIAM F
13-L-000608, RUTH 311

BUCK KATHLEEN M V. SHRIMPTON JON W
14-L-001164, MATOESIAN 351

ROSE TIMOTHY V. O'REILLY AUTO PARTS
15-L-001671, MATOESIAN 351

DRAINER CYNTHIA A V. COUSLEY CHRYSA A
16-L-000184, MATOESIAN 351

STOVEY STEPHEN V. ROGERS AARON
16-L-000773, RUTH 311

MORAN KEITH V. SCHUERING DANIEL P
16-L-000540, MATOESIAN 351

DRACH EDWARD G V. DAVIS CALVIN J
15-L-001147, MATOESIAN 351

FLOOD ANDREW V. CITY OF GRANITE CITY ILLINOIS
15-L-000953, MATOESIAN 351

HOLLENBACK JEFFREY V. WEIDLER JOSHUA
15-L-001368, MATOESIAN 351

ALL-JER DEVELOPMENT CORP V. ANDERSON MARK
15-L-000646, MATOESIAN 351

BARACKMAN KEITH V. ANDERSON GARY L
16-L-000500, MATOESIAN 351

LEVERETT KRYSTLE V. FEAZEL JOSEPH C
13-L-001761, MATOESIAN 351

WORTHAM ERIC V. MCGILL JOHN
16-L-000445, MATOESIAN 351

BOHNENSTEIHL BLAKE V. STEIN STEEL MILL SERVICES, INC
16-L-000013, MATOESIAN 351

BAAB MICHAEL J V. YODER DANIEL M
15-L-000482, MATOESIAN 351

FORD RITA V. VANDER VELDE THEODORE L MD
15-L-000582, MATOESIAN 351

DEL VALLE NELSON V. GRANDVIEW FARMS LIMITED PARTNE
15-L-001356, RUTH 311

SANDERS DUSTY V. KOONTZ DEMARCO J
15-L-001283, MATOESIAN 351

SCHMIDT TAMMY V. LANGA RESOURCE GROUP INC DBA L
16-L-000611, MATOESIAN 351

REAKA LEONARD V. MCDANIEL TRENT MD
12-L-000860, BARBERIS 230

NORBURY STEVEN V. HIGHLAND READY MIX CONCRETE IN
12-L-000423, MATOESIAN 351

GUINN CHRISTOPHER R V. KAHRIG KEVIN M
16-L-000443, RUTH 311

RYAN CONSTRUCTION & ROOFING LL V. UNDERWOOD SCOTT
15-L-000988, RUTH 311

SPENDTHRIFT FARM LLC V. CRISTEL JIM
15-L-001612, MATOESIAN 351

CRESON FORREST S V. VANECEK MARY L
15-L-001656, MATOESIAN 351

SLAYDEN KATLYN V. PAPPA JOHNS PIZZA
14-L-001768, MATOESIAN 351

BOYCE TERENCE V. VINING ROY J
16-L-000735, MATOESIAN 351

ALLSTATE RECOVERY SERVICES INC V. BEACON FUNDING CORPORATION
15-L-001664, MATOESIAN 351

SMITH CURTIS A V. PONTIOUS DEBORAH
13-L-001662, MATOESIAN 351

PAITZ LAURI S V. COLEMAN AMANDA L
14-L-000500, MATOESIAN 351

10:00 AM

DAKOTA FINANCIAL LLC V. DOTY JAMES
16-L-000529, BARBERIS 230

1:30 PM

COPELAND DWAYNE C EXECUTOR OF V. ALTON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL DBA
14-L-000827, HARRISON 247

Madison County asbestos motion docket Aug. 9-12

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Tuesday, August 9

9:00 AM

LAWRENCE GEORGE V. A O SMITH CORPORATION
14-L-000636, ASBESTOS J 327

Wednesday, August 10

9:00 AM

EDWARDS RICHARD V. AFTON PUMPS INC
15-L-001323, ASBESTOS J 327

MILLER RONALD L V. ADVANCE AUTO PARTS INC
15-L-000577, ASBESTOS J 327

BROUGHTEN JAMES V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000992, ASBESTOS J 327

GRANT DELORAS V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001185, ASBESTOS J 327

HO LINDA AS SUCC PERS REP OF E V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001424, ASBESTOS J 327

RODRIGUEZ CRUZ INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000936, ASBESTOS J 327

SHIFFLETT ROGER V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000964, ASBESTOS J 327

PELTO SARAH J V. 3M COMPANY FKA MINNESOTA MININ
15-L-001246, ASBESTOS J 327

SMITH HAZEL INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-001512, ASBESTOS J 327

DURAN WILLIAM V. 84 LUMBER
16-L-000065, ASBESTOS J 327

SHERMER DOROTHY INDIVIDUALLY V. OAKGRIGSBY INC AS SUC IN INT T
16-L-000133, ASBESTOS J 327

MATTHEWS JOANNE L V. AERCO INTERNATIONAL INC
16-L-000423, ASBESTOS J 327

MCCANT SANDRA SPECIAL ADMINIST V. AO SMITH CORPORATION
16-L-000509, ASBESTOS J 327

BOWEN DAVID V. ADVANCE AUTO PARTS INC F/K/A W
14-L-000928, ASBESTOS J 327

ROBERTSON DENNIS V. 5 STAR CONSTRUCTION CO
14-L-001727, ASBESTOS J 327

TYSON SUSAN INDIVIDUALLY V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-000262, ASBESTOS J 327

ASHTON BILLIE V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-000649, ASBESTOS J 327

VANALSTINE KAREN INDIVIDUALLY V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-000762, ASBESTOS J 327

DZEN NOLA INDIVIDUALLY V. AO SMITH CORPORATION
14-L-001271, ASBESTOS J 327

ORAM SUZANNE V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001316, ASBESTOS J 327

NOWAK JOHN V. ABB INC DBA ABB DE INC INDIVID
14-L-001352, ASBESTOS J 327

EASTERLING SHIRLEY V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001376, ASBESTOS J 327

ANDREWS KEITH SPEC ADM OF THE V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001688, ASBESTOS J 327

BILLUPS LOUISE INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000227, ASBESTOS J 327

TVEDTEN DIANE R V. SQUARE D CO
15-L-000313, ASBESTOS J 327

DINGMAN JEANNE INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000407, ASBESTOS J 327

LUNDY THOMAS V. 4520 CORP INC SUCCESSOR IN INT
15-L-000417, ASBESTOS J 327

COUNSMAN BETTY INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000543, ASBESTOS J 327

SIDBURY WILLIAM V. ADVANCE AUTO PARTS INC FKA WES
15-L-000744, ASBESTOS J 327

COMMANDER JOHNNY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-001108, ASBESTOS J 327

BLALOCK DONALD V. AFTON PUMPS INC
15-L-001302, ASBESTOS J 327

HUBBARD JOSEPH W JR V. 3M COMPANY FKA MINNESOTA MININ
15-L-001495, ASBESTOS J 327

HARRIS JAMES T V. ABB INC SUCC TO ITE ELECTRICAL
15-L-001559, ASBESTOS J 327

BELL ELMER V. 3 M COMPANY
16-L-000349, ASBESTOS J 327

OBERRY REGINA INDIVIDUALLY V. A W CHESTERTON INC
13-L-002145, ASBESTOS J 327

COTTON RICKY V. 4520 CORP INC
14-L-001347, ASBESTOS J 327

MANN ANNA INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000937, ASBESTOS J 327

NELSON TAMI V. A SCHULMAN INC
15-L-000386, ASBESTOS J 327

UMFRESS JIMMIE V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000724, ASBESTOS J 327

MCGINLEY WILLIAM V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-001150, ASBESTOS J 327

PAULSEN DON V. AO SMITH CORPORATION
14-L-000023, ASBESTOS J 327

SMITH BENJAMIN K V. AMERICAN OPTICAL CORP
14-L-001655, ASBESTOS J 327

JOHNSON ANDREW J V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
12-L-000417, ASBESTOS J 327

DUFUR GEORGIA INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000800, ASBESTOS J 327

HUFF PATRICIA L V. AMERICAN HONDA MOTOR CO INC
15-L-001324, ASBESTOS J 327

SHEAROUSE KAREN V. ACF INDUSTRIES, LLC
12-L-000648, ASBESTOS J 327

ROSS DAVID V. AII ACQUISITIONS LLC FKA HOLLA
13-L-000859, ASBESTOS J 327

WAITS GREGGORY V. ALCOA INC
13-L-001195, ASBESTOS J 327

HUBERT MELVIN V. ARMSTRONG INTERNATIONAL INC
14-L-000178, ASBESTOS J 327

HARRINGTON LEVON V. AO SMITH CORPORATION
15-L-000917, ASBESTOS J 327

FRANZ JOSEF V. BORGWARNER MORSE TEC LLC AS SU
15-L-001555, ASBESTOS J 327

DOUGHERTY MAXINE V. CERTAIN-TEED CORPORATION
15-L-001564, ASBESTOS J 327

RETHMAN EDWARD V. AKEBONO BRAKE CORPORATION
16-L-000244, ASBESTOS J 327

BROWN ROBIN INDIVIDUALLY V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
13-L-001526, ASBESTOS J 327

GARCIA ERLEEN INDIVIDUALLY V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-000523, ASBESTOS J 327

EBERLY MICHAEL A V. BEAZER EAST INC FKA KOPPERS IN
14-L-000650, ASBESTOS J 327

MCVETY MARGARET V. 84 LUMBER
14-L-001128, ASBESTOS J 327

EVELAND DAVID INDIVIDUALLY V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-001477, ASBESTOS J 327

SMITH SANDRA INDIVIDUALLY V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-001492, ASBESTOS J 327

TAYLOR ALTON V. 4520 CORP INC
14-L-001505, ASBESTOS J 327

GEE ALICE INDIVIDUALLY V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-001641, ASBESTOS J 327

KITTELL MURIEL V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-001712, ASBESTOS J 327

GALLAGHER PATRICK V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
14-L-001753, ASBESTOS J 327

STOHRER FAY INDIVIDUALLY V. 84 LUMBER
15-L-000029, ASBESTOS J 327

SETTING BERNARD V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-000567, ASBESTOS J 327

GRASS DAVID V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-000597, ASBESTOS J 327

SCHWEITZER ROSE MARIE V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-000602, ASBESTOS J 327

SUMMERFORD PAUL V. AW CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-001197, ASBESTOS J 327

GREEN GERALD D V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-001288, ASBESTOS J 327

TIFT HARRY D V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-001370, ASBESTOS J 327

JOHNSTONE JOEL B MR. V. ARVINMERITOR INC
13-L-001568, ASBESTOS J 327

KENNEDY DONNA J INDIVIDUALLY V. AIR LIQUID SYSTEMS CORPORATION
14-L-001340, ASBESTOS J 327

Thursday, August 11

9:00 AM

DONALD CHARLES U V. AGRO CORPORATION IND AND AS SU
15-L-001236, ASBESTOS J 327

KREUTER LYLE V. A W CHESTERTON COMPANY
15-L-000615, ASBESTOS J 327

Madison County foreclosures July 25-Aug. 1

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JULY 25, 2016

STONEGATE MORTGAGE V. TANIESHA R. COX, $45,482.68, 1719 MARKET ST., MADISON. 16-CH-433

JULY 26, 2016

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK V. SHIRLEY A. RICHARDSON , $8,462.21, 3525 OSCAR, ALTON. 16-CH-434

JULY 27, 2016

FIRST COLLINSVILLE BANK V. SUSAN K. LANDING, LINDA R. RAYHO, LORI RIEKER, $124,968.22, 102 MESA DR., COLLINSVILLE. 16-CH-435
HSBC BANK V. MARCIA KNIGHT, $51,169.53, 1827 SMITH AVE., ALTON. 16-CH-436
BANK OF AMERICA V. PRINCESS STANLEY, $31,710.22, 2081 14TH ST., GRANITE CITY. 16-CH-437
DEUTSCHE BANK V. BRAD AND CINDY LAROSE, $180,852.96, 2634 WIPPORWILL LN., GRANITE CITY . 16-CH-438
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK V. THOMAS AND DEBORAH SPARKS, $37,387.92, 128 BONDS AVE., E. ALTON. 16-CH-439

JULY 28, 2016

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK V. MATTHEW A. STOCKERT, $74,533.80, 3630 ABERDEEN AVE., ALTON. 16-CH-440
STATEBRIDGE CO. V. VINCENT AND SUSAN PRICE, $56,347.56, 906 LONG BRANCH RD., TROY. 16-CH-441
OCWEN LOAN SERVICING V. DANNY M. AND JEANETTE BONE, $68,827.19, 509 ENGLISH PL., GRANITE CITY. 16-CH-442

JULY 29, 2016

PROVIDENCE BANK V. DAN B. DAVIDSON, $29,983.31, 1909 ROCKHILL RD., WOOD RIVER. 16-CH-444
FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE V. MARK GERHARDT , $22,698.94, 552 HIGHLAND AVE., ALTON. 16-CH-446
SELENE FINANCE V. STEPHANIE AND PHYLLIS C. DEPPER, $128,557.41, 4409 CHANTEL, ALTON. 16-CH-447
BANK OF AMERICA V. NICK AND ERICA BOHMER, $35,448.34, 10 FOUNTAINEBLEAU DR., GRANITE CITY. 16-CH-448
FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN STAUNTON V. ASHLEIGH CUNLIFFE AND JUSTIN SHEA, $105,967.22, 303 REED ST., TROY. 16-CH-449

AUGUST 1, 2016

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK V. HEATHER L. AND MICHAEL C. ANDERSON, $272,193.46, 1508 COLES CT., EDWARDSVILLE. 16-CH-450

St. Clair County foreclosures July 18-28

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JULY 18, 2016

REGIONS BANK V. KERRY W. PHILLIPS AND LISA S. PHILLIPS, $38,110.10, 8337 STATE RT. 163, MILLSTADT. 16-CH-473

JULY 19, 2016

US BANK V. CHARLOTTE R. FISHER AND SILVONGILIQUE ELLIS WILLIAMS , $58,430.47, 48 N. 98TH ST., BELLEVILLE. 16-CH-474

JULY 20, 2016

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK V. FANNIE GARDNER, $107,556.34, 1172 PRICE ST., CAHOKIA. 16-CH-475
LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING V. DENNIS AND CHERYL THEURER, $94,474.39, 731 FOREST AVE., BELLEVILLE. 16-CH-476
OCWEN LOAN SERVICING V. LAWRENCE W. NAEGLE, $85,559.02, 508 PARK AVE., BELLEVILLE. 16-CH-477
WELLS FARGO BANK V. ANDREW D. AND VICTORIA SHELTON, $157,996.58, 901 COLUMBIA AVE., FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS. 16-CH-478

JULY 28, 2016

NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE V. DESMOND BERNARD, $139,304.96, 609-611 GANIM DR., BELLEVILLE. 16-CH-515

St. Clair County real estate July 11-20

$
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JULY 11, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$89,900- 140 N. FLORIDA AVE. - THOMAS A. JACKSON TO DAVID AND MICHELLE COLLINS
$66,000- 909 CLEARVIEW DR. - MARK AND JANENE EVANSCO TO MATT EISKANT
$285,000- 1612 TENTH FAIRWAY DR. - PATRICK MURPHY TO BARBARA J. AND DANIEL B. KELLY
$110,000- 31 S. 38TH ST. - MICHAEL KINSMAN TO TERESA PAGE

CASEYVILLE

$1,500- 1736,1742 LEVEL ST. - DAVID SBARBARO TO MARTHA HUITRON

DUPO

$87,500- 2013 SUGARLOAF - MISSISSIPPI VALLEY PROPERTIES TO NICKOLAS EHRHARD
$33,500- 221 S. 5TH ST. - DIANNA LYNN ROBINSON TO TAYLOR JOHNSON ROY

E. ST. LOUIS

$14,000- 670 N. 40TH ST. - RREF II PEBP IL TO BEVERLY FISHER
$3,650- 1418 & 1424 N. 9TH ST., 906 NATALIE - CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI VALLEY ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE TO THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONSERVANCY

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS

$219,950- 101 CRYSTAL LN. - SCOTT & CHRISTY ONEIL TO JUSTIN & CASSANDRA POUGH
$133,000- 202 MERRIWEATHER LN. - STEVE AND PAULINE TASSALLO TO TODD HERRINGTON

FREEBURG

$81,500- 102-104 S. ALTON ST. - SOUTHERN INVESTMENT LAND TRUST TO RYAN AND ANNE CALVERT

LEBANON

$105,000- 10901 UPLAND TERRACE DR. - DAVID WALGAMOTT TO GERALD MCDONNELL & JANET RINGUETTE
$437,000- 1232 NATALYNS TRACE - CHAD AND AMY WALTER TO MUTHISAK SOONATTRAKUL
$165,000- 104 W. DEE ST. - DALDA PROPERTIES TO MY LINH TRUONG

MARISSA

$66,500- 319 PINCKNEYVILLE RD. - MARY L. WEST AND EDWARD L. MAYO JR. TO RONALD L. AND SANDRA K. HUCKFELDT

MASCOUTAH

$287,500- 6463 TIMBER LANE DR. - MICHAEL P. SWAFFORD TO JEFFERY D. AND JULIE A. ROLFINGSMEIER
$43,000- 344 S. DOUGLAS AVE. UNIT C - THELMA GIBSON HERSEY TO SHANNON LYNN BARNARD
$243,000- 849 TANZANITE - CHARLES A. HODGES AND AMY R. HODGES TO JOSEPH AND AMY BLANCHARD

MILLSTADT

$150,000- 401 W. MILL ST. - LAVERN L. HAUSS TRUST TO JAMES W. AND KAREN S. CREASON

OFALLON

$600,000- 1554 FRONTAGE RD. - SADE INVESTMENTS TO DEVELOPMENT AND OPTION UNLIMITED
$262,000- 756 BASSETT ST. - RONALD S. AND TRACYE L. BETZLER TO BARRETTE AND ALICIA LAFRANCE
$546,000- 226 OBERNUEFEMANN RD. - MMAAAC LLC TO FULFORD HOMES
$65,000- 417 COLLEEN DR. - CINDY L. HENSLEY TO MATTHEW HILL
$40,000- 1312 MERRIAM PKWY. - D&F CONTRACTING TO INNOVATION CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
$40,000- 1328 MERRIAM PKWY. - D&F CONTRACTING TO INNOVATION CONSTRUCTION SERVICES

SHILOH

$167,000- 73 INNSBRUCK LN. - JASON J. AND GRETCHEN A. CARROLL TO KELLY S. KUNKLE

SWANSEA

$125,000- 2 TWILIGHT DR. - JOHN AND MARSHA HOPKINS TO DORIAN SHARKEY

JULY 12, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$420,600- 1309 W. D ST. - THE JUDICIAL SALES CORP. TO HOMEFRONT PROPERTIES
$117,900- 15 WINCHESTER DR. - DOUGLAS M. AND TERRI L. KRAEMER TO PAMELA SAFFORE
$808,551- 649 CARYLE RD. - CNL APF PARTNERS TO SCFRC HW G LLC

CAHOKIA

$16,500- 110 ST. THOMAS LN. - JCS ACQUISITIONS TO DUCK AND DOG

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS

$184,000- 965 MILLIKIN DR. - GLEN AND LEISJE LEHMAN TO NATHAN AND CHAELA KINNEY

MASCOUTAH

$19,000- 131 W. GREEN ST. UNIT 1 - FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE TO MICHAEL A. AND ELIZABETH J. BANUELOS

OFALLON

$306,000- 1433 CLIFTON WAY CT. - JERROD AND LINDSAY EARLY TO MICHAEL AND RACHEL LEAVELL
$210,000- 508 GLEN OAK DR. - LENA A. AND JEROME BREWER TO ANDREW AND MELISSA DALLNER

SHILOH

$204,500- 2763 LONDON LN. - NATHAN AND KATHRYN SMITH TO KRAIG AND SARA HENSON

SWANSEA

$249,900- 1828 BARBARY WAY - TERRY AND MICHELLE CARTER TO DELCENIA PERRY

JULY 13, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$64,000- 1417 WABASH - NAYLAND P. ONEAL TO CATHERINE YEAGER
$70,000- 305 LINCOLNSHIRE BLVD. - ELIZABETH W. BELIVEAU TO NICHOLAS TROTTER AND LAUREN BEISHIR
$130,000- 37 LARKSPUR DR. - PETER J. AND LISA A. KOWALSKI TO ROMIN MOHAMMAD KAMFAR

CAHOKIA

$18,000- 1204 ST. STEPHEN DR. - DARWYN BUCHANAN TO HIEN NGUYEN

E. ST. LOUIS

$18,000- 562 N. 24TH ST. - DARWYN BUCHANAN TO HIEN NGUYEN

OFALLON

$175,000- 925 STONE BRIAR DR. - SOUTHERN ILLINOIS LAND INVESTMENTS TO INNOVATION CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
$486,000- 509 LAKE VISTA WAY - HUNTINGTON CHASE HOMES TO STEPHEN P. AND SHARLA K. JUENGER
$298,333- 1321 MERRIAM PKWY. - HOMES BY DEESIGN TO NANCY TERVEER

SWANSEA

$278,000- 4272 REDFIELD DR. - TRAVIS AND JESSICA WILLIAMSON TO LARRY H. AND UNKYONG HOLDEN

JULY 14, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$54,600- 200 S. 32ND ST. - VERNON THACKER TO GILBERT AND JAMIE DAVENPORT
$67,500- 410 S. 10TH ST. - ROBERT TRAPP TO CAROL GILLIHAN
$50,000- 1220 EXPRESS DR. - BETTY J. GOMERAC TO DONITA AND RONALD DOBBELARE

E. ST. LOUIS

$62,060- 1021 LA PLEINE DR. - ESTATE OF CHARLES STEPTORE TO CHERYL BELL
$22,550- 876 MILDRED AVE. - FANNIE MAE TO CHESTER J. MARSHALL

FREEBURG

$229,000- 912 MEADOW BROOK DR. - JAMES AND DONNA KISGEN TO MICHAEL AND ANGELA GUESS
$127,000- 24 LAKEVIEW DR. - SECRETARY OF HUD TO BRET RAPPS
$159,000- 109 N. ALTON - JOSHUA L. AND AMY L. PRYOR TO JESSE J. AND MYRA L. WOTTOWA

OFALLON

$154,500- 506 REBECCA DR. - JAMES FRANKLIN AND DENISE FOGWELL TO JOE AND CAROLYN MATA
$314,900- 1618 MARY TODD LN. - KENNETH B. AND OLIVIA T. MCDONALD TO CHRISTOPHER LEE AND BRETTE ASHLEY KNAUTE
$349,800- 716 LONGFELLOW DR. - SCOTT AND BARBARA RILEY TO DAVID AND ANGELA WALKER
$450,399- 1237 MERRIAM PKWY. - D&F CONTRACTING TO JOHN AND TONYA DIMOS
$186,000- 387 SWEETWATER LN. - MATT WICINSKI TO SHANEKA TIMMONS
$493,600- 8441 TREYBROOKE PL. - CHRISTOPHER SZYMANSKI TO DAVID E. AND KAREN A. SMITH

SHILOH

$186,000- 2217 DEER SPRINGS - MICHAEL AND ANGELA GUESS TO TAMARA NELSON

SMITHTON

$226,500- 5633 SEASONS RIDGE - TIMOTHY J. BIEHL TO KEVIN AND LISA SISK

SWANSEA

$140,000- 3944 MICHAEL JOHN DR. - SECRETARY OF HUD TO KATY YOKLEY

JULY 15, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$49,900- 38 LUCINDA AVE. - TYLER JACKSON TO LATOYA S. LYTLE
$89,900- 300 AARON DR. - MARY HAMPE TO TERESA JONES
$6,000- 158 N. 78TH ST. - WELLS FARGO BANK TO GLOBAL PREMIER ASSET MANAGEMENT
$90,000- 404 N. 37TH ST. - JONATHAN S. AND REBECCA CARPENTER TO MOLLY E. EATON
$112,500- 2965 BIG OAK LN. - JERRY A. HAAS TO CYNTHIA M. HAAS
$167,967- 600 S. MISSOURI AVE. - ROBERT C. AND ROBERTA J. HOWARD TO DANIEL S. CROCKETT
$74,000- 411 E. B ST. - TIMOTHY ZARING TO ALONSO VALENZUELA AND ERICKA SEYLER
$175,000- 10 TANEWOOD CT. - KAREN MCLEAN TO TRC MANAGEMENT SERVICES

CASEYVILLE

$110,000- 14 SCATES ST. - DAKOTA CAR WASH TO DEREK S. AND AUBREY L. PARKER

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS

$182,500- 275 EDDING LN. - MARK AND LOIS ICKES TO MELANIE A. AND RICHARD D. SMITH
$134,000- 329 PLEASANT RIDGE RD. - KENNETH AND SHANNON WILSON TO BIANCA L. CALLOWAY

FREEBURG

$173,365- 5167 PLEASANT RIDGE SCHOOL RD. - KESSLER FAMILY FARM TO MATTHEW AND VANESSA BIVER
$178,000- 356 MEADOW RIDGE DR. - PATRICK AND TIFFANY SMOKER TO JOHN AND MARSHA HOPKINS

MASCOUTAH

$118,000- 320 N. LEBANON ST. - VELMA BROKERING & NORMAN UHRING TO TIMOTHY K. ZARING AND SHELBY MERRELL

OFALLON

$165,000- 201 E. 2ND ST. - JACOB HAYES TO KRISTEN KELLER AND CHRISTINA NORDIN
$255,000- 717 JANEITA CT. - S. LOUIS RATHJE TO KEVIN PRIEST
$257,000- 1027 RICHLAND PARK - STONE BRIDGE ESTATES DEVELOPMENT TO TIMOTHY J. BIEHL
$240,000- 6812 RIDGE POINTE DR. - CHAD R. AND BILLIE L. VOGT TO DANIEL CLARK AND KATHERINE ELIZABETH VOGEL
$110,000- 612 GRANITE DR. - DANIEL P. GUEST TO HELEN S. EDITH

SHILOH

$180,000- 2627 PIPER HILLS DR. - SUSAN JANO AND CATHY DEAN JOHNSON TO BRADLEY J. ALBERTINA AND MELINDA A. BASILE

JULY 18, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$11,500- 207 CASCADE DR. - CITIZENS COMMUNITY BANK TO MELODY GOODWIN AND STEVE WIEGAND
$28,500- 715 S. 15TH ST. - RITA A. BECKER TRUST TO DENNIS M., BRITTANY AND BONNIE WEATHERFORD
$60,000- 2915 GODFREY ST. - ROBERT A. AND JULIE A. WILSON TO JEFFREY M. VOGT
$130,000- 1107 WINGED FOOT - REBECCA K. AND JOSHUA J. WOHLTMAN TO DIANE AND ANNETTE RICE
$163,900- 2001 IVY CHASE LNN. - RICHARD AND MICHELLE BOWMAN TO CINDY BECKMAN
$75,000- 620 N. CHURCH - KIRK AND BARBARA HAGERMAN TO COLTON AND SARAH BUTLER
$126,500- 3324 DEVONSHIRE DR. - SKY BLUE DEVELOPMENT TO LAWRENCE PARKER AND SHAKIRIA GRANT
$82,500- 4121 N. PARK DR. - DOROTHY M. MEINKOTH TO QUANN JOHNSON SR. AND KRISTEN JOHNSON
$148,000- 3220 TANGLEBROOK DR. - PETER J. AND JENNIFER AMANN TO JOYCE HARRIS AND AMECA MORGAN

CAHOKIA

$6,000- 1826 HARVEST AVE. - JAMES P. CLARK TO METRO STL HOMES
$3,500- 33 LOUISE LN. - VERNON L. AND SHERYL A. HILL TO METRO STL HOMES
$551- 517 S. DOROTHY DR. - THE JUDICIAL SALES CORP. TO RE SOLO 401K TRUST

CASEYVILLE

$51,007- 231 OLIVER ST. - US BANK TO DAVID WAYNE TUCKER AND DENNIS NEIL PHILLIPS

DUPO

$4,950- 225 LIME ST. - JPMORGAN CHASE BANK TO SECRETARY OF HUD

E. ST. LOUIS

$13,000- 328 & 330 N. 58TH ST. - VISTA SECURITIES TO RODNEY HAIR
$50,000- 2726 N. 40TH ST. - VICTOR GONZALEZ AND PETRA VARGAS TO JOSE LUIS GOMEZ RODRIGUEZ

FREEBURG

$80,000- 3 LAKE DR. - SECRETARY OF VA TO BRIAN K. MCCANN

LEBANON

$327,900- 205 PINE TRAIL - ALLEN D. AND BEVERLY J. CRIDER TO JAMES M. AND ANN M. MITCHELL
$286,900- 119 MCKENDREE PARK RD. - MARVIN K. MEDDOWS TO JACK E. AND MELISSA L. MITCHELL

OFALLON

$254,800- 22 RAVENWOOD CR. - SUSAN HERTICH TO MATTHEW EVERSGERD
$195,000- 506 HIGHLAND ESTATES DR. - SCOTT A. AND JANE D. SMITH TO JOSEPH A. DAHM AND AMANDA SCHMERSAHL
$82,500- 607 W. JEFFERSON ST. - CHRISTOPHER DEAN TO JAMEEL AND VANESSA ACOSTA
$202,000- 1109 ROUNDTABLE CT. - LOUIE AND AILEEN LODES TO TRAVIS AND RACHEL MCGREW

SHILOH

$172,500- 1468 KINGSLEY DR. - TRACY ABERNATHY TO EMMA LEIGH BUIE

SWANSEA

$174,900- 10 ENGLEWOOD DR. - RICHARD T. AND LINDA L. TELL TO ELAINE JARVI TRUST
$135,000- 3904 SMELTING WORKS RD. - LEE G. AND JEANNE M. HARTMANN TO NICHOLAS RAETZ
$245,000- 3008 SMELTING WORKS RD. - MICHAEL AND ANGELA CAUSEY TO JOHN AND KELLY SENSOUCIE

WASHINGTON PARK

$100,000- 5400 BUNKUM RD. - HANI TO CHICAGO TITLE LAND TRUST

JULY 19, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$208,000- 118 HICKORY LN. - WILLIAM P. AND PATRICIA HOPKINS TO LORENZO ANDRADE
$23,000- 1317 LEBANON AVE. - DONNA J. RICHARDSON TO SHELDON TYLER JOHNS
$135,000- 328 FLAGSTONE DR. - ANGELITA AND BRIAN CRUME TO NEAL AND LINDSEY EILERS
$175,000- 32 SHADY LN. - HARRIET MAE LIPPERT TO AIMEE AND MARC SAFFORD
$199,900- 9 ASPENLEAF LN. - THE KEEL FAMILY TRUST TO GINGER ANN BUDNICK

CAHOKIA

$2,100- 1013 ERNST 321 ISABELL - JAB SECURITIES TO MARTELLE ADAMS
$12,000- 1605 MULLENS AVE. - ROBERT GOLDEN TO CLJ SERVICES
$16,500- 1605 MULLENS AVE. - CLJ SERVICES TO TOPSTONE INV CAH 1
$22,000- 606 ST. CECELIA DR. - PHILLIP AND CRISTA HAUSMANN TO DONNA BRADY AND JAIME TOMPKIN
$20,000- 59 E. ADAMS - STEPHEN LANCASTER TO ST. LOUIS INVESTMENTS

E. CARONDELET

$25,000- 818 ELIZABETH AVE. - ROBERT C. GUMMERSHEIMER, CHERYL L. KAUFMAN, AND MICHAEL C. GUMMERSHEIMER TO KENNETH HODGE

E. ST. LOUIS

$5,000- 1425 KINGSHIGHWAY - HAWK PROPERTIES TO HENRY R. SCOTT

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS

$229,000- 7358 TIMBERPOINT CT. - PATRICIA L. SKINNER TO WILLIAM AND PATRICIA HOPKINS
$31,800- 9105 WEDGEWOOD DR. - SECRETARY OF VA TO US BANK

LENZBURG

$34,450- XXXX SCHALLER RD. - KEVIN G. AND SUSAN M. LOYET TO RITCHIE AND DENISE KELLER
$34,450- XXXX SCHALLER RD. - CHARLES R. AND KAREN S. MUELLER TO RITCHIE AND DENISE KELLER

MASCOUTAH

$60,000- 6950 BRICKYARD RD. - THEODROE J. AND DEBRA K. DEERING TO BRET AND SUSAN RASCH

MILLSTADT

$250,000- 60 JOSIAH LN. - CORY AND KELLY EASTON TO ADAM AND RAE VANCE

NEW ATHENS

$160,000- 1007 OLD BALDWIN RD. - JAY E. LIPINSKI TO RICK A. AND CYNTHIA K. CHAPMAN
$120,000- 1104 LELA DR. - HAROLD T. KLINGENBERG TO CONRAD W. WIDDERSHEIM

OFALLON

$215,000- 919 ST. NICHOLAS DR. - MARK J. AGUIAR TO VINCENT CASTROGIOVANNI
$108,500- 1505 OAK MEADOW DR. - JOSIAH M. SHERMAN TO HENRY W. AND DEANNA K. SCHMIDT
$260,000- 209 AZALEA CT. - FANNIE MAE TO TROY AND TRACIE TEMPLEMAN
$326,000- 1323 BRUDENELL CT. - DAIVD AND KAYLEEN RODRIGUEZ TO FELICIA AND WILLIAM EWING
$260,000- 118 HODGENS MILL LN. - JOHN H. AND MIKA REHRER TO CLARENCE RICHARD ELGIN AND KRISTINA D. GILI ELGIN
$164,500- 2154 STREAMVIEW CT. - MARK J. AND TRACY L. OECHSLE TO BRANDON R. AND MICAELA JOHNSON

SHILOH

$270,000- 1105 HIGH VALLEY LN. - DAVID J. AND HILLARY Y. WILBURN TO RAYMOND H. WINFREY
$255,000- 203 ANTIOCK CT. - DANIEL J. JR. AND BARBARA A. POLAHAR TO NICOLE HARDY

SWANSEA

$208,000- 3620 SCOTSDALE DR. - BARBARA ANN KORNETT TO PATRICIA A. GASKILL

JULY 20, 2016

BELLEVILLE

$149,000- 2221 WENDY WAY - SCOTT FLUEGGE TO COREY AND CHLOE E. SCHLAU
$75,000- 604 N. 17T ST. - CHRISTOPHER AND SARA YANKEY TO KIRK AND BARBARA HAGERMAN
$179,000- 104 WESTHAVEN MEADOWS - CHERI SMITH TO CHADWICK ROBERT KERR AND DEENA KAYE KERR
$75,000- 1536 N. CHURCH ST. - JACOB AND CHRISTINA TAPIA TO JAQUOI AND AMANDA K. WILEY
$143,000- 13-15 W. G. ST. , 614 BRISTOW, 915 WABASH AVE. - SOUTHERN INVESTMENT LAND TRUST TO GATEWAY REAL ESTATE 1

CAHOKIA

$4,000- 715 HOWELL AVE. - DENISE CRANNAGE TO JUSTIN CRUSE
$70,000- 1445 SUTTLE CT. - GALE MIMS TO AMIKA ALLEN

CASEYVILLE

$2,000- 8709 BOTANICAL AVE. - ANTHONY L. MORRIS TO FREDI BETANCOURT

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS

$13,500- 5 BARCO AVE. - FANNIE MAE TO DOLORES HUERTA
$46,000- 225 KADLEC DR. - WELLS FARGO BANK TO CHRISTOPHER P. JORDAN

MILLSTADT

$138,500- 428 E. LAUREL ST. - AARON D. AND REBECCA J. GODARD TO JASON A. HOFFMANN

NEW BADEN

$72,500- 826 MARGARET CT. - FLOYD AND MARGARET ASHDOWN TO ROBERT AND BEVERLY L. CONREAUX

OFALLON

$290,000- 924 STONE BRIAR DR. - CHRISTOPHER AND BETH GONZALES TO AARON AND KELLY GROSOS
$156,500- 503 FONTAINEBLEAU - COREY VOTRIAN TO ROBIN GLAWATSKI
$230,000- 7049 MILLBROOK LN. - OSCAR GARCIA TO RYAN BRAUER AND AMBER NORDIKE

SHILOH

$165,000- 2507 LONDON LN. - PRABIN AMATYA AND ARATI SHRESTHA TO MAJORY ROLLING
$230,000- 867 CALISTA RIDGE DR. - ERIC A. AND CHRISTINA SCHROEDER TO NICHOLAS K. PROSSER AND KRISTIN K. MCCARD
$45,000- 3428 DAKOTA DR. - SHILOH BUILDING GROUP TO NEW TRADITION HOMES
$51,000- 3421 MAGENA CT. - SHILOH BUILDING GROUP TO NEW TRADITION HOMES

SMITHTON

$180,000- 5420 WHITE OAK DR. - RUTH SPANIEL TO BRENDEN CRIPE AND KAYLA WEBSTER
$103,500- 5948 DOUGLAS RD. - NATALIE J. AND KEVIN STEELE TO MATTHEW J. GREEN

SWANSEA

$39,900- 4172 BIVERTON DR. - CMI CONSTRUCTION TO KYLE AND CATHRYN BURNHAM
$215,000- 3908 SMELTING WORKS RD. - LEE G. AND JEANNE M. HARTMANN TO ATHENA M. VODA
$120,000- 309 BRIAN DR. - GALDEN ANDREW PARKS TO MATTHEW M. MILLER

Madison County foreclosures July 15-22

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JULY 15, 2016

ALTON

$1,792,000- 620 E. LANDMARKS RD. - THEODORE L. AND JULIANNE PREHN TO THE LARSON FAMILY TRUST
$32,000- 2725 GRANDVIEW AVE. - JCS ACQUISITIONS LLC AND HOMEFRONT PROPERTIES TO JOHN RADCLIFF
$7,000- 1024 TREMONT ST. - US BANK TO MARIO EMANUEL

COLLINSVILLE

$120,000- 33 CARNATION DR. - FIRST COLLINSVILLE BANK TO DOUG WEISS, JUDY WEISS, SARAH WEISS AND JOSHUA ROGERS
$100,000- 202 CRESTWOOD DR. - FIRST COLLINSVILLE BANK TO DOUG WEISS, JUDY WEISS, SARAH WEISS AND JOSHUA ROGERS
$182,000- 126 PINE HOLLOW LN. - JENNIFER E. AND TODD WISE TO ALLEN AND SARA MALSBURY
$30,000- 4 PLACE PETITE - FIRST COLLINSVILLE BANK TO DOUG WEISS, JUDY WEISS, SARAH WEISS AND JOSHUA ROGERS
$288,000- CALIFORNIA AVE. - DONALD G. AMSITH JR. AND RHONDA L. SMITH TO DONALD CHANDLER
$100,000- 5 & 7 JERI LYNN LN. - KIRK AND KIMBERLY B. BEEMAN TO CBH HOLDINGS
$213,000- 300 MONTICELLO DR. - DAVID G. AND DIANE K. VOGLER TO DAVID S. AND APRIL E. HONAKER
$166,000- 1605 W. MAIN ST. - BART B. ASTRAUSKAS TO CLEOPHAS MILLER SR.

EDWARDSVILLE

$337,000- 898 PRESTONWOOD DR. - WADE C. AND LAUREN STEWART TO PATRICK AND ASHLEY RATZ
$36,000- OLD CARPENTER RD. - T.J. AND JAMI R. MATTISON TO KEYLON J. AND ZOE CODERRE
$5,000- 7 KLEIN AVE. - GLORIA D. DICKERSON TO NOLA E. J. WILLIAMS
$5,000- 900 BLOCK OF KEIN AVE. - GLORIA D. DICKERSON TO NOLA E. J. WILLIAMS
$130,500- 704 MONTCLAIRE AVE. - CINNAMON AND JAY COVERT TO ANDREW AND JANET TUCKER
$375,000- 5 TRANQUILITY RIDGE - BILL W. AND ELLEN B. KROHNE TO JONATHAN AND DANETTE FRITSCHLE
$79,500- 244 ADAMS ST. - GARY L. AND ROLLA A. GOFF TO PHILIP SGAMBELLURI AND ASHLEY DOOLEY

GLEN CARBON

$170,000- 28 FOREMAN DR. - TIMOTHY R. PLEMONS TO LAUREN NEAL
$135,000- 127 COLLINSVILLE ST. - BRIAN W. AND DANIELLE BRAMMEIER TO RANDALL AND LINDA ROBBINS
$330,000- 429 WESTCHESTER DR. - JOSEPH R. AND MARIAN M. CERVASSI TO TRACY M. AND BOYD D. LANCE
$110,000- 127 N. MAIN ST. - LAVERNE GRIFFIN TO HUNZIKER PROPERTIES
$340,000- 6107 STONE WOLFE DR. - CHRIS L. FRICKE AND CYNTHIA A. MAKLER TO TODD J. AND JENNIFER E. WISE

GODFREY

$59,000- 1422 SEILER RD. - JCS ACQUISITIONS LLC AND HOMEFRONT PROPERTIES TO 6ELW INC.

GRANITE CITY

$38,000- 2475 CENTER ST. - ARTHUR CHASTAIN II AND NORENE D. CHASTAIN TO RAFAEL AND VICTORIA FRIASS
$30,000- 2423 LINCOLN AVE. - RGT J ENTERPRISES TO CALEB DAVIS

HIGHLAND

$30,000- 275 N. PORTE DR. - JAMES H. MANVILLE TO BERNARD O. AND IRENE J. HUELSMANN
$35,000- XXX RIDGE DR. - JUDITH K. MERKLE TO BRAD M. AND SUSAN SCHAEFER KRONK
$66,666- 1715 ZSCHOKKE ST. - PATRICIA NELSON TO SUSAN WHITE

MARYVILLE

$195,000- 816 OAKRIDGE DR. - DAVID WAYNE SCHNEIDEWIND TO GEOFFREY M. BURRIS AND AMELIA R. VINEYARD

NEW DOUGLAS

$1,025,000- E. GARNER ST., 1ST ST. - SHIRLEY HOPPER ESTATE TO ROBERT A. AND GRETCHEN E. NIEHAUS

ST. JACOB

$204,538- 505 DAKOTAH DR. - LINDOW CONTRACTING INC TO MICHELLE HAWTHORNE
$212,000- 1740 TRIAD LN. - SONDRA K. SUTER TO KERRY AND DEB MYERS GAULTNEY
$60,000- 12 DAVID DR. - JAMES MAPLE SMITH AND PHYLLIS RUTH SMITH TO ADAM AND REBECCA SEVERIT
$340,000- 8830 WENDELL CREEK DR. - PAOLI BUILDERS TO BRIAN BARTLING AND JOSEPH C. MISSEY
$360,000- 2426 TIMBER CREEK RD. - STEVEN J. AND NATALIE K. ENCAPERA TO JARROD D. AND ANNESSA M. SKOUBY

TROY

$110,850- 2635 STAUNTON RD. - GERALD REULECKE TO JAMES AND PATRICIA RADCLIFFE
$100,000- 462 TYLER DR. - THREESUM DEVELOPMENT TO SPENCER HOMES
$147,000- 23 LAKE DR. - CYNTHIA AND JOHN W. RUSSELL TO LISA M. HARTSOE
$195,000- 42 STONEBROOKE - WILLIAM WYDRA TO MATTHEW A. AND SARAH ENOCH POTTS
$122,000- 512 OAKWOOD DR. - BENJAMIN SHEROKY TO CHRISTOPHER P. WEATHERS

JULY 18, 2016

ALHAMBRA

$117,500- 409 NORTHEAST ST. - TORY ERNST TO DUSTIN B. CAMERON

ALTON

$116,500- 4425 WEDGEWOOD DR. - ANDREW J. AND KARI J. FREY TO JANICE M. WILLIAMS
$24,700- 2212 MILLS AVE. - THE SECRETARY OF HUD TO BRIAN AND BRENDA HAZEL
$22,000- 704 MITCHELL - MARGARET A. SCHWEGEL TO MICHAEL POHLMAN
$50,000- 105 ELBLE ST. - ESTATE OF BERNARD L. HAMMER TO PAUL AND JENNIFER K. YOST
$130,000- 5401 WENZEL RD. - GARY D. CARTER AND DAVID E. KINDER TO GABRIEL D. KUYKENDALL
$72,900- 3835 OSCAR AVE. - BRENT R. TROBAUGH TO SARA N. WELCH

BETHALTO

$272,000- 204 GABRIELLE CR. - KELLY AND KIMBERLY BOHNENSTIEHL TO WILLIAM AND KIMBERLY BUMGARDNER
$108,900- 101 LEE ST. - MICHAEL A. AND SAMANTHA M. CONWAY TO KEVIN AND CAROL SYFERT
$169,890- 4446 E. GOLIKE LN. - MICHAEL AND BONNIE SHAW TO DAVID AND SHARON FREEMAN

COLLINSVILLE

$315,000- 9531 COLLINSVILLE RD. - ROBERT LUKEN TO ANGELA SIEBE
$43,000- 1700 E. RAMADA BLVD. - STACY C. CIGLIANA TO NANCY THOMPSON CULBERSON
$275,000- 36 WOODFORD WAY - PAUL A. KESTER TO EDDIE QUIGG AND SUZANNE M. QUIGG
$95,095- 1012 VERMONT AVE. - THE JUDICIAL SALES CORP. TO DAVID WAYNE TUCKER AND DENNIS NEIL PHILLIPS

E. ALTON

$64,000- 103 CARDOT ST. - JOE CLARY AND SHERRY PATTON TO TIMOTHY MOORE

EDWARDSVILLE

$140,000- 624 N. FILMORE ST. - ROBERT AND DENSE MACDONALD TO ZACHARY T. MILLER
$215,000- 4 CARDINAL CT. - DARIN MATHIS TO JACOB D. LACHAPELLE
$175,900- 571 CLOVER DR. - TINA M. SCHUMANN TO TED D. AND TIA M. REISING
$203,000- 310 JEFFERSON RD. - BETH NALICK TO ANASTASIA SIEJKA

GODFREY

$102,500- 417 MERCURY DR. - MICHELLE L. DYER TRUST TO DAVID L. AND LINDA MACDOWELL SHAW
$86,250- 4902 VOLTAIRE DR. - INEZ RICHNAV TRUST TO IZCO LLC
$56,000- 224 ANNA AVE. - LINDA G. DAVENPORT TO TIMOTHY F. LOWE
$188,000- 1903 BISCAY DR. - MICHAEL AND HOLLY BUNCH TO ANDREW AND KARI FREY

GRANITE CITY

$112,000- 1713 GARFIELD AVE. - WISE CHOICE PROPERTIES TO HALEY D. DIONEDA

HIGHLAND

$170,000- 484 PIKE DR. WEST - DARYN RIECHMANN TO JEREMY AND BRITTANY BARDILL
$32,000- 235 N. PORTE DR. - BERNARD O. HUELSMANN TO BERNARD O. HUELSMANN
$225,000- 235 N. PORTE DR. - BERNARD O. AND IRENE J. HUELSMANN TO ANDREW J. HAAS
$64,000- 1324 PINE ST. - EILEEN ROBERTSON MCGINN TO ALICIA D. FARRIS

MARYVILLE

$55,000- 2206 S. CENTER ST. - FIRST COLLINSVILLE BANK TO DOUG WEISS, JUDY WEISS, SARAH WEISS AND JOSHUA ROGERS

MORO

$50,000- 124 VINE ST. - ROBERT BRATTEN TO JOSH CARROLL

S. ROXANA

$83,000- 809 SOUTHARD PL. - MATTHEW SMAY TO WILLIAM D. RUSH

ST. JACOB

$84,000- 10133 PANSY RD. - WARREN THURNAU TO JEROME L. JR. AND JENNIFER R. WILDHABER

TROY

$46,000- 1236 CHALMERS DR. - CHARLESTON OF TROY TO HARTMANN HOMES

VENICE

$9,000- 1213 ORIOLE ST. - MARY J. JONES TO DOROTHY C. JOHNSON

WOOD RIVER

$89,900- 312 WHITELAW AVE. - SARAH SCHNEIDER TO CORDALE STANFORD
$45,000- 838 HALLORAN AVE. - LAURA BATES TO MELISSA A. SCHNOEKER

JULY 19, 2016

ALTON

$20,000- 3318 JACKSON ST. - FANNIE MAE TO LIESA L. MORALES
$40,000- 1817 EVERGREEN - ROBERT L. HART JR. TO ROBERT E. DUKE JR.
$65,000- 2136 WYCOFF ST. - SANDRA K. BOURDOURIS TO ABIGAIL A. AND RYAN D. ALLSMAN
$134,000- 1775 STOREY LN. - JUSTIN AND TARA BELL TO TANNER JONES
$77,000- 4002 ALBY ST. - CHRISTINA M. MURPHY AND JOSEPH C. PYATT TO REGINA L. SAVAGE
$82,500- 1000 ALBY ST. - EASY RENTALS TO JENNIFER MCDOWELL
$13,000- 518 WYSS - JOHN DIXON TO DREE DIXON

BETHALTO

$62,250- 405 TEXAS BLVD. - FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE TO DAMON P. PETERSON

COLLINSVILLE

$134,000- 204 BILL LOU DR. - BRAKE ESTATE TO JOSHUA A. AND JACKIE L. KNIGHT

E. ALTON

$82,500- 367 SPRUCE ST. - CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES TO JEROME J. JACOBS
$154,000- 531 MALLARD DR. - PAUL J. AND BARBARA I. LANZEROTTE TO MATTHEW R. COOK
$75,000- 147 HODGE ST. - GARRETT BECK TO TARA MERLOCK
$52,000- 476 CALIFORNIA AVE. - WILLIAM BELLM TO TJW PROPERTIES

EDWARDSVILLE

$265,000- 2710 HUNTERS RIDGE - GARY K. THERIEN TO STEVEN D. SUTTER

GODFREY

$81,000- 3717 STANKA LN. - DENNIS J. FUNK TO CLINTON J. CHAMPLIN IV
$125,000- 724 LAFAYETTE AVE. - DANIEL AND LAUREN MARGESON TO STEPHANIE LAFIKES AND JACOB HARRISON
$149,500- 4717 BRECHT LN. - DAVID A. AND KAREN BATTY TO ZACHARY S. AND REBECCA J. WITTMANN
$107,900- 524 GRACE ST. - RODNEY AND GRETCHEN COOK TO GARY J. AND GAYLENE KINDER
$93,000- 612 MERCURY DR. - REGINA SAVAGE TO PETER AND KAYLA GREENBERG

GRANITE CITY

$60,000- 148 TROECKLER LN. - RMP PROPERTIES TO JEFF MILLER
$96,000- 2604 CAROLYN BLVD. - LARRY DEAN AND PATRICIA A. JACOBS TO BRADLEY AND TABITHA ARNOLD
$57,101- 2637 RUTH ST. - FANNIE MAE TO HERMAN SCHROEDER JR.
$165,000- 129 EMERALD WAY WEST - GARY E. AND SARAH GRAY TO PAUL A. AND FRANCES L. MIKULAS
$51,000- 3172 JILL AVE. - JANET A. BRAUNER TO DALFRED HAYNES JR.
$12,500- 123 BRIARCLIFF DR. - BLUESTEM PROPERTIES TO SCOTT COLEMAN
$29,040- 2564 ADAMS ST. - JPMORGAN CHASE BANK TO SECRETARY OF HUD

HIGHLAND

$161,600- 13222 IBERG RD. - RANDY R. AND AARON ROBERT GELLY TO DAVID AMMANN

MARYVILLE

$225,500- 2912 CAMBRIDGE PT. - KEITH RULE AND KAROL BALBIN TO ANDREW L. ADAMS AND SHEINA R. FRANCO

TROY

$50,000- 526 CHICKADEE - TIMOTHY M. AND JAMES P. HUGHES TO WILLIAM RAY DYER

WOOD RIVER

$55,000- 575 S. CENTRAL AVE. - ESTATE OF ILA D. JOHNSON TO ROBERT L. HART JR.
$169,900- 10 KENDALL DR. - KEVIN AND DENISE KLOKKENGA TO JONATHAN AND JESSICA ALESANDRINI
$92,900- 331 S. 9TH ST., - JONATHAN AND JESSICA ALESANDRINI TO JASON AND KATHRYN DAMM

JULY 20, 2016

ALTON

$14,300- 610 LIBERTY ST. - SECRETARY OF HUD TO CHRISTINE R. VELLOFF

BETHALTO

$370,000- 312 CROSS CREEK - THEODORE L. AND JULIANNE PREHN TO MATTHEW AND LEAH BRUECKNER

COLLINSVILLE

$32,500- JOHANN DR. - PHELPS CONSTRUCTION TO STANLEY D. AND JUDY K. BACZEWSKI
$95,000- 300 PINE LAKE RD. - JAMES F. COLLIER TO LISA M. KLAUS
$108,900- 103 COTTAGE DR. - CLAYTON JOHN MEYER TO ASHLEY ODELL

EDWARDSVILLE

$135,000- 423 CHERRY ST. - JENNIFER L. ROTH TO TMS PROPERTIES
$185,000- 1343 CHANCELLOR DR. - 1343 CHANCELLOR REAL ESTATE TO ERIC AND ASHLEY BUCHTA
$2,100,000- 7325 MARINE RD. & 7331 MARINE RD. - HOSPICE OF SOUTHERN IL TO RUTH'S HOUSE OF EDWARDSVILLE REAL ESTATE

GLEN CARBON

$15,000- CENTER ST. - FRANK MATTEA JR. TO RONALD C. CHLIBEC AND MATTHEW J. CHLIBEC
$20,000- CENTER ST. - STANLEY MATTEA TO RONALD C. CHLIBEC AND MATTHEW J. CHLIBEC
$60,791- 7073 AUGUSTA DR. - SAVANNAH CROSSING DEVELOPMENT TO SPENCER HOMES

GRANITE CITY

$76,000- 2502 MORRISON RD. - NANCY JEAN EAKER AND DENNIS RAY EDWARDS TO ROBERT R. DUNHAM

MARYVILLE

$244,000- 1861 APPLETON CT. - HARTMANN HOMES TO RUSSELL AND GAIL PERRY
$48,900- 1900 CRIMSON OAK DR. - REMINGTON PLACE TO HARTMANN HOMES

TROY

$55,000- 947 BAUER RD. - STEVEN E. AND KAREN SUE BAUER TO JAY W. AND AMY M. LEWIS
$215,000- 34 AUTUMN CR. - MARELLA M. VLASICH TO JOHN AND FRANCES CASELTON

WOOD RIVER

$20,000- 3401 MAPLE RIDGE DR. - FIRST CLOVER LEAF BANK TO FULFORD HOMES

JULY 21, 2016

ALTON

$50,000- 1221 E. 7TH ST. - MICHAEL AND RACHEL MCNAMARA TO BRENDA CROFT
$33,500- 2401 BIRCH ST. - KIM EXTON AND HAROLD AND MARY SCATES TO CHARLES AND DEBORAH EHLERS
$225,000- 614 WASHINGTON AVE. - STONEBRIAR TOWNHOMES TO DANIEL J. AND JULIE S. WARREN
$20,000- 2707 MAXEY ST. - JAME R. REEVES TO LARRY SIMS
$130,000- 2220 MARQUETTE DR. - DAGAN HAMPTON TO STEVE AND MICHELE SOWDERS

BETHALTO

$26,000- 212 BUTCHER ST. - UNITED COMMUNITY BANK TO DARRIN SINGLETON
$158,000- 42 KLEIN DR. - JEFFREY AND SUZANNE EDDINGER TO CHARLES A. RAY

COLLINSVILLE

$41,750- 314 MONROE ST. - SECRETARY OF HUD TO ANTHONY J. JANINI
$8,000- 2013 GOETHE ST. - MICHAEL FISCHER TO ANTHONY J. MOTTIN
$91,000- 146 S. SUMNER BLVD. - JODY L. MCKECHNIE TO JOHNATHAN TRUAX

E. ALTON

$199,000- 433 VALLEY DR. - JAMES L. HOLCOMB TO BRIAN M. BATTUELLO

EDWARDSVILLE

$276,000- 32 BROOKSHIRE LN. - LAWRENCE AND LYNN RODGERS TO KEVIN AND AMANDA TUCKER
$489,000- 510 W. LAKE DR. - WALTER J. HECK JR. TO ANDREW REZNACK AND CRYSTAL DOUDERA
$120,000- 1118 RANDLE ST. - WILLIS A. AND JOAN CROWE TO SARAH SCHROEDER
$87,500- 1459 LADD AVE. - C&C GROUP TO THE KEY KEEPER

GLEN CARBON

$149,000- 141 HAMPTON DR. - GINGER HAYES TO WILLIAM AND LISA WHITAKER

GODFREY

$115,000- 1504 DUVAL DR. - KEVIN R. AND ELLEN L. ESTES TO VERNON L. AND BRENDA S. LANGER

GRANITE CITY

$36,500- 4801 KAREN DR. - RPDK DEVELOPMENT TO GRANITE CITY COMMUNITY UNIT SCHOOL DISTRICT #9

HIGHLAND

$140,000- 1514 OLIVE ST. - MICHAEL CHINAL TO LAWRENCE J. AND LYNN M. RODGERS
$135,000- 200 A FIELD CROSSING DR. - HEIRS OF JOEL RALPH RANDOL TO KENT AND ANN LINENFELSER

TROY

$55,000- 1981 GLIDDON BLVD. LOT D1 - VILLAS OF WINDSOR WAY TO RESOURCE CONSTRUCTION

WOOD RIVER

$80,000- 445 N. 2ND ST. - KEVIN CASE TO JACOB COBB

WORDEN

$10,500- 217 E. BURROUGHS - VERNON A. AND CHELSEA L. RUBLE TO DANIEL S. AND PATRICIA MILLER

JULY 22, 2016

ALTON

$29,484- 1401 TO 1407 E. BROADWAY - CRAVTEC LIMITED PARTNERSHIP TO SI RESOURCES

BETHALTO

$200,000- CORNER IL RT. 140 AND WILLIAMS ST. - ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO MWKW

COLLINSVILLE

$178,000- 1985 BANYAN TREE RD. - COREY L. AND LEAH B. MEYER TO TINA MARLOW
$192,500- 1332 THEODORE AVE. - JOEL P. WHITENER TO AARON WILLIAMS
$228,700- 9 CHELSEA RD. - DAVID J. AND JULIE A. RADOMSKI TO RICKY ST. JOHN AND LORI ST. JOHN
$217,500- 404 S. COMBS - GAYLE KASSING WOLFF TO CBH HOLDINGS

COTTAGE HILLS

$20,500- 1429 5TH ST. - JPMORGAN CHASE BANK TO FREEDOM HOMES

E. ALTON

$78,500- 416 MONROE ST. - CAREY M. MILLER AND LORI SHAKE TO SARA RETZER
$67,500- 225 W. MCCASLAND AVE. - MELISSA BLOODSWORTH TO CURTIS ANDERSON JR.

EDWARDSVILLE

$350,000- 8 JENNIFER LN. - JAMES E. AND LINDA K. NOLAN TO MICHAEL E. AND JEANNE M. PATTON
$632,000- 6 SUGAR HILL CT. - STEPHEN L. AND KATHLEEN A. CIMAROLLI TO TROY D. AND MICHELLE VAN HAUEN
$117,500- 721 FREDERICK ST. - STEPHANIE MICHELLE VONNAHME TO JASON HAWKINS
$604,000- 4851 N. ST. RTE 157 - SCOTT C. AND ELIZABETH L. ONKEN TO DAVID M. KOLLORE JR.
$100,000- 9 STEINMEYER WOODS - ESTATE OF LOLA WETZEL TO OLIN WETZEL
$7,000- 519 GILBERT DR. - HOLISHOR ASSOCIATION TO RAY SHANE BAKER
$190,000- 1304 CHANCELLOR DR. - MAJID MOLKI AND AFAGH MOLKI TO NEIL T. GROSS
$141,000- 1083 BARBADOS DR. - CHERYL KELLEY TO JENNIFER SCHWALB
$190,000- 930 HOLYOAKE RD. - ROBERT J. AND KIMBERLY K. LESHE TO DEREK A. AND KARA M. LEE

GLEN CARBON

$165,000- 34 FOREMAN DR. - AMANDA MARIE MOATS TO CAREY MILLER AND LORI SHAKE
$51,000- 8 CARRIAGE LN. - ARCH HOUSING TO JCS ACQUISITIONS AND HOMEFRONT PROPERTIES

GRANITE CITY

$6,000- 1216 MERIDIAN AVE. - MICHAEL P. DIXON TO RICHARD A. AND CHELISE R. WOOTEN
$29,000- 2453 ST. CLAIR AVE. - US BANK TO A.R. PROERTY DEVELOPMENT
$37,800- 2316 ADAMS ST. - WELLS FARGO BANK TO LAN D. NGUYEN
$32,900- 248 EMERALD WAY W. - D&E DEVELOPMENT TO STARK CONTRACTING
$219,900- 248 EMERALD WAY W. - STARK CONTRACTING TO JUSTIN T. SHIELDS

HIGHLAND

$75,000- 41 LINCOLN LN. - WILFRED A. AND JEAN S. HOLZINGER TO LELAND C. AND BETTIE L. BROWN
$185,000- 350 REGENCY CT. - RICHARD A. MARTIN TO PETER AND AMANDA LANDERS
$120,000- 2101 OLIVE ST. - MARION M. KESNER TRUST TO SUSAN M. NEUHAUS
$80,000- 1606 OAK ST. - NEUMANN AND KRUSE PROPERTIES TO MONICA L. LANGE

MARYVILLE

$229,900- 7008 MAGONA CT. - KEVIN L. AND BARBARA P. MELCHER TO JOSEPH WONDOLOWSKI AND ALICIA BUEHNE

POCAHONTAS

$199,000- 3412 HIGHRON DR. - NATHAN A. AND MICHELE R. JANINI TO KYLE GRUNER AND AMBER KORSMEYER
$196,500- 3427 PIERLAND DR. - CHAD AND JODI DORMIRE TO MEGAN BAGBY

TROY

$114,500- 304 E. CLAY ST. - ROBERT WILLIAM CANGE TO AMY ROULANAITIS
$293,000- 540 GLENDALE DR. - OSBORN HOMES TO JOSEPH P. AND ASHLEY M. SWITZER
$235,000- 506 LOWER MARINE RD. - SUSAN C. DONNELL TO RICHARD L. III AND JESSICA L. DUDLEY

WOOD RIVER

$29,000- 117 E. ACTION AVE. - JOHN R. HUBER TO JUAN ROMERO
$32,500- 268 10TH ST. - WELLS FARGO BANK TO JEROME JOSEPH JACOBS

Employee accuses tree service company of negligence

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EDWARDSVILLE — An employee is suing a Granite City tree service business, alleging its negligence led to the plaintiff sustaining injuries.

Toby Thomas filed a complaint on July 25 in Madison County Circuit Court against Mike Hanfelder, doing business as Hanfelder's Tree Service, alleging negligence in failing to provide safe equipment.

According to the complaint, on May 22, 2015, while Thomas was working for Hanfelder in one of the defendant's bucket trucks, he fell from the bucket. The suit says he sustained disabling and disfiguring injuries, great pain and mental anguish, lost wages and incurred hospital and medical expenses. 

The plaintiff alleges Hanfelder's failed to provide a well-maintained bucket truck and safety harness and failed to obtain worker's compensation insurance.

Thomas seeks a trial by jury and judgment of more than $50,000. He is represented by attorney Gregory L. Shevlin of Cook, Ysursa, Bartholomew, Brauer and Shelvin Ltd. in Belleville.

Madison County Circuit Court case number 16-L-1048


Madison County and Gibbons must defend retaliation lawsuit, judge rules

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BENTON – Madison County government and state’s attorney Tom Gibbons must both defend a retaliation suit of former secretary Andrew Kane, U.S. District Judge Phil Gilbert ruled on July 26. 

He denied a motion to dismiss Kane’s claim against the county, finding Kane sufficiently pleaded the claim. 

He rejected the county’s argument that Kane worked solely for Gibbons. 

“The complaint clearly indicates that Kane believes the county was one of his employers and that he believes the county is therefore liable for the discrimination and retaliation he suffered on the job,” he wrote. 

“Generally, employment is a common sense concept that needs no detailed factual allegations to put a defendant on notice of the alleged employment relationship and its role in the plaintiff’s asserted right to relief,” he wrote. 

Kane was hired in 2010, and fired in 2012 on charges that he threatened blackmail and exhibited racism. 

He complained to the Illinois Human Rights Commission, which issued a notice of substantial evidence in his favor.

He won reinstatement in arbitration, but Gibbons didn’t take him back. 

He sued Gibbons and the county in circuit court, and Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder ordered reinstatement in 2013. 

Gibbons complied, but Kane later resigned. 

Kane sued Gibbons and the county in federal court this February, claiming conditions at work constituted retaliation for winning in Crowder’s court. 

His lawyers, William Buchanan and Lee Barron of Alton, claimed Gibbons and the county treated him in a demeaning, insulting and disparaging manner. 

They claimed that Gibbons assigned Kane to manual labor at an isolated location, and that he barred Kane from appearing at his office. 

Gibbons retained attorney John Gilbert of Edwardsville, who answered by arguing that Gibbons reinstated Kane to a position consistent with his classification. 

Attorney Gilbert wrote that the position was not demeaning and the assignment did not constitute an adverse action under the Civil Rights Act. 

Attorney Gilbert filed no answer to the claim against the county, arguing that Judge Gilbert should dismiss it because Kane didn’t work for the county. 

Judge Gilbert ruled that Kane’s complaint satisfied the requirements for pleading, but he left the question of employment open for the summary judgment stage. 

“Until that stage, it is sufficient that the county be able to glean from the complaint that Kane believes it employed him and that it was therefore responsible for improper employment actions taken against them,” Judge Gilbert wrote.

Gilbert has set trial next May.

Judges have to be impartial

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It's the lawyer pool. That's where most judges come from. Plaintiffs attorneys and defense attorneys ascend to the bench and are expected not to take sides any longer.

Some rise to the occasion. Some don't.

The Third Judicial Circuit judges who appointed Donald Flack to the bench in 2012 apparently thought he was qualified at the time, but they may have changed their minds because they declined to reappoint him in 2015.

 After being rejected for reappointment, Flack reapplied and then was accepted.
  
Why the back and forth? What were the concerns?

As reported this week by The Record, Flack has an extensive background in asbestos litigation, financial stakes in cases still pending, close ties and business partnerships with attorneys who appear before him in court, and a wife and son currently or formerly employed by local law firms. He has obvious conflicts of interest.

Flack formed litigation relationships with two national asbestos firms after assuming his judgeship. The statement of economic interests he filed with the Illinois Supreme Court in 2013 disclosed relationships with Baron and Budd of Houston and Simon, Eddins and Greenstone of Long Beach, Calif.

He did not disclose those relationships on the first statement he filed in 2012, the year of his appointment to the bench.

All his statements have disclosed relationships with Thomas Q. Keefe Jr. of Belleville, David R. Jones of Edwardsville, Christopher Donohoo of East Alton, and the Perica law firm of Wood River, as well as an interest in “asbestos cases filed by Flack law office or Perica law firm before 5/25/12,” his first day as judge.

At least 30 of his cases remain active in Madison County, including three he filed after the announcement of his appointment as associate judge.

His statements also disclosed litigation interests beyond asbestos, at least two of which remain active.
All of this would be highly disconcerting to any defendant in Flack’s courtroom.

How many conflicts does he have to have to be disqualified as a judge?

Deutsche Bank deflects blame in suit claiming it financed terror that killed or maimed local men

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EAST ST. LOUIS – Deutsche Bank of Germany, defending a claim that it provided Iran with material support for attacks on U.S. troops, argues that the theory behind the claim would implicate the United States itself.
 
“Plaintiffs’ attempt to hold Deutsche Bank liable under the facts alleged here illustrates just how sweeping their ‘material support to Iran’ theory is,” wrote Troy Bozarth of Hepler Broom in Edwardsville.
 
“Indeed, by plaintiffs’ logic, recent actions the U.S. government has taken to implement the nuclear deal with Iran have foreseeably increased Iran’s ability to fund terrorists, and thereby have made the United States itself a ‘material supporter’ of terrorism,” he wrote.
 
Bozarth acts as local counsel for Deutsche Bank, in association with Covington and Burling of Washington, D.C.
 
New Jersey lawyer Gary Osen sued the bank in U.S. district court in May, on behalf of Rhonda Kemper of Randolph County and Charles Shaffer of St. Clair County.
 
An explosion killed Kemper’s son, David Schaefer, in Iraq.
 
An explosion in Iraq cost Shaffer a leg.
 
Osen wrote that plaintiffs sought to hold the bank accountable for helping Iran finance, orchestrate and support attacks on U.S. peacekeepers.
 
He wrote that Deutsche Bank conspired with Iranian banks to transfer billions through the U.S. while avoiding detection by regulators.
 
The bank is accused of removing from payment messages any information that identified entities subject to sanctions.
 
Osen wrote that injuries from terror attacks were precisely the risks contemplated by executive orders, statutes, and regulations restricting Iran’s access to U.S. dollars.
 
He wrote that in November, the bank agreed to pay $258 million for violating New York state law in transactions on behalf of countries subject to sanctions.
 
Bozarth’s brief conceded that the bank entered into settlements with New York State regulators and the Federal Reserve System.
 
“Deutsche Bank has accepted responsibility for the lack of transparency of its activities involving certain sanctioned countries, but regulators made clear that actual sanctions violations resulting from this conduct were limited,” he wrote.
 
Bozarth disputed that such conduct constituted material support for terrorists.
 
He wrote that plaintiffs did not connect the bank to Hezbollah or the division of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard that allegedly paid and trained terrorists.
 
Plaintiffs seek to hold the bank responsible not because it supported a terrorist organization, “but because it allegedly performed services for a state that separately supports terrorists,” he wrote.
 
He wrote that although they allege that Iran manufactured the devices in the explosions at issue and provided them to terrorists, they didn’t specify who placed or detonated the devices.
 
Further, they didn’t allege that the bank transacted any business with Hezbollah or the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
 
Bozarth wrote that Iran could rely on its billions in reserve to finance terror, with or without additional hundreds of millions from a Western bank.
 
He wrote that the only transactions the bank allegedly participated in involved Iranian financial institutions.
 
“And like the government of Iran itself, it is clear that the relevant Iranian banks had ‘legitimate’ operations,” he wrote.
 
“Material support to a foreign state, even one that is recognized as a state sponsor of terrorism, does not proximately cause every injury inflicted by every terrorist organization associated with that state.”

Terror victims can’t seize Persian artifacts to satisfy $72 million judgment, Seventh Circuit rules

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CHICAGO – Terror victims who won a $72 million judgment against the Islamic Republic of Iran can’t enforce it by seizing Persian artifacts at the University of Chicago, Seventh District appellate judges ruled on July 19.
 
Circuit Judge Diane Sykes wrote, “Seizing a foreign state’s property is a serious affront to its sovereignty, much more so than taking jurisdiction in a lawsuit.”
 
“Correspondingly, judicial seizure of a foreign state’s property carries potentially far reaching implications for American property abroad.”
 
Circuit Judge William Bauer concurred and so did Southern Illinois Chief District Judge Michael Reagan, sitting by designation.
 
They found ambiguity in U.S. terror law, and they resolved it in Iran’s favor.
 
They overruled two Seventh Circuit precedents from similar litigation, and their opinion conflicted with one that Ninth Circuit judges issued in June.
 
Such drastic steps normally require review by all judges in the circuit, but no review will occur because five of the 12 judges disqualified themselves.
 
Elimination of those five, plus exclusion of Sykes and Bauer, left only a minority of five who could have requested review.
 
Automatic denial of review provoked Circuit Judge David Hamilton to dissent.
 
“In this rare situation, the panel apparently has the power to overrule circuit precedent and to create a circuit split without meaningful review,” Hamilton wrote.
 
He wrote, “Yet that step is a mistake that should not go without comment.”
 
“The courts must choose between two statutory readings: one that favors state sponsors of terrorism, and another that favors the victims of that terrorism.”
 
He wrote that in interpreting statutory text, the court should draw on statutory purpose and legislative history.
 
“We should not attribute to Congress an intent to be so solicitous of state sponsors of terrorism,” he wrote.
 
“The balance here should weigh in favor of the reading that favors the victims.”
 
Eight victims of a 1997 attack in Jerusalem and their relatives originally sued Iran in federal court at Washington, D.C.
 
They won default judgment, but Iran did not pay.
 
They registered the judgment in the Northern District of Illinois in 2003, seeking to attach the Persepolis Collection and other artifacts at the University of Chicago.
 
Iran and the university moved for summary judgment, and District Judge Robert Gettleman granted it.
 
On appeal, the United States entered as friend of the court and took Iran’s side.

Deutsche Bank deflects blame in suit claiming it financed terror that killed, maimed local men

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EAST ST. LOUIS – Deutsche Bank of Germany, defending a claim that it provided Iran with material support for attacks on U.S. troops, argues that the theory behind the claim would implicate the United States itself.
 
“Plaintiffs’ attempt to hold Deutsche Bank liable under the facts alleged here illustrates just how sweeping their ‘material support to Iran’ theory is,” wrote Troy Bozarth of Hepler Broom in Edwardsville.
 
“Indeed, by plaintiffs’ logic, recent actions the U.S. government has taken to implement the nuclear deal with Iran have foreseeably increased Iran’s ability to fund terrorists, and thereby have made the United States itself a ‘material supporter’ of terrorism,” he wrote.
 
Bozarth acts as local counsel for Deutsche Bank, in association with Covington and Burling of Washington, D.C.
 
New Jersey lawyer Gary Osen sued the bank in U.S. district court in May, on behalf of Rhonda Kemper of Randolph County and Charles Shaffer of St. Clair County.
 
An explosion killed Kemper’s son, David Schaefer, in Iraq.
 
An explosion in Iraq cost Shaffer a leg.
 
Osen wrote that plaintiffs sought to hold the bank accountable for helping Iran finance, orchestrate and support attacks on U.S. peacekeepers.
 
He wrote that Deutsche Bank conspired with Iranian banks to transfer billions through the U.S. while avoiding detection by regulators.
 
The bank is accused of removing from payment messages any information that identified entities subject to sanctions.
 
Osen wrote that injuries from terror attacks were precisely the risks contemplated by executive orders, statutes, and regulations restricting Iran’s access to U.S. dollars.
 
He wrote that in November, the bank agreed to pay $258 million for violating New York state law in transactions on behalf of countries subject to sanctions.
 
Bozarth’s brief conceded that the bank entered into settlements with New York State regulators and the Federal Reserve System.
 
“Deutsche Bank has accepted responsibility for the lack of transparency of its activities involving certain sanctioned countries, but regulators made clear that actual sanctions violations resulting from this conduct were limited,” he wrote.
 
Bozarth disputed that such conduct constituted material support for terrorists.
 
He wrote that plaintiffs did not connect the bank to Hezbollah or the division of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard that allegedly paid and trained terrorists.
 
Plaintiffs seek to hold the bank responsible not because it supported a terrorist organization, “but because it allegedly performed services for a state that separately supports terrorists,” he wrote.
 
He wrote that although they allege that Iran manufactured the devices in the explosions at issue and provided them to terrorists, they didn’t specify who placed or detonated the devices.
 
Further, they didn’t allege that the bank transacted any business with Hezbollah or the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
 
Bozarth wrote that Iran could rely on its billions in reserve to finance terror, with or without additional hundreds of millions from a Western bank.
 
He wrote that the only transactions the bank allegedly participated in involved Iranian financial institutions.
 
“And like the government of Iran itself, it is clear that the relevant Iranian banks had ‘legitimate’ operations,” he wrote.
 
“Material support to a foreign state, even one that is recognized as a state sponsor of terrorism, does not proximately cause every injury inflicted by every terrorist organization associated with that state.”

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