Thomasz Szabo, 26, is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 23 by U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson in Washington, D.C.
CHATHAM, Ill. (AP) — An 8-year-old injured when aused for a popular after-school camp in Illinois this spring has died.
Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon posted a news release on his office’s Facebook page Tuesday announcing Bradley Lund of Springfield was pronounced dead at 5:52 a.m. Monday. The death toll from the April 28 crash in Chatham now stands at five people, including 8-year-old Ainsley Johnson; 7-year-olds Kathryn Corely and Alma Buhnerkempe, all of Chatham; and 18-year-old Rylee Britton of Springfield.According to state police, a car left a road, crossed a field and smashed into a building that the group Youth Needing Other Things Outdoors was using for the camp. The vehicle traveled through the building and exited the other side.The 44-year-old driver was not hurt. Authorities have said
but it remains unclear whether she’s been arrested, has been taken into custody or has been charged. Asked for an update, Trooper Shafer McKune of the Illinois State Police’s public information office emailed a copy of the coroner’s news release to The Associated Press along with a one-sentence statement saying that Sangamon County prosecutors will provide an update when they finish a “thorough review of the investigation.”He did not say when that review would be completed.
Chatham is a community of about 15,000 people outside Springfield, the state capital.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Top Trump administration officials — fresh off touring one of the country’s“If I could never play at 1 a.m. ever again for the rest of my life, I would be so happy,” No. 7 seed Keys, a 30-year-old born in Illinois and based in Florida, said with a laugh. “You know when you’re going to go on. There’s no chaos. You go to bed at a totally normal time. I feel like I’ve lived my night-owl life, and I would really love to be that first-on slot for the rest of time.”
Other than the initial matches on each court in the morning and at night, it is impossible to know when to warm up and ramp up. Tennis isn’t a timed sport, so it’s anyone’s guess when, say, a day’s third or fourth match in a given arena will begin — and as the temperature and weather shifts across the hours, the clay at the French Open can shift, too.Daily schedules often are released in the late afternoon or evening prior, and
, those aren’t always accepted.“That’s one thing that’s not good about tennis: We don’t know when we play until the day before,” said Holger Rune, who was the No. 10 men’s seed at the French Open and reached the fourth round.