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A man who lived a life of luxury off of nearly $13 million his wife embezzled from her Pittsburgh employer over more than a decade will spend 18 months in federal prison.
Gary Mills, 61, was found guilty in 2019 of three counts of filing a false tax return following a nine-day jury trial. He was sentenced Monday by Senior U.S. District Judge Nora Barry Fischer. He lived in DuBois and had ties to Allegheny County.
His wife, Cynthia A. Mills, pleaded guilty in 2017 to mail fraud, wire fraud, tax evasion and money laundering after taking $12.9 million from Matthews International, a monuments and engraving firm on Pittsburgh’s North Side from 1999 to 2015. She was ordered to serve eight years in prison.
CHS Senior Carlos Torres, graduating Class of 2021, has already chosen his road to be .
CHS Student of the Week is Itzel Martinez Gutierrez
CHS Student of the Week is Reyna Ruiz Castaneda
CHS Student of the Week is Victor Pajuelo Requena
CHS student Story at the Nevada Livestock Show
CHS student Strasser at the Nevada Livestock
CHS students at the Nevada Livestock Show
CHS yearbooks are almost gone
Phil Brady❮❯
Two roads diverged in Carson City / And sorry I could not travel both / And be one traveler, long I stood / And looked down one as far as I could / To where it bent in the undergrowth; / Then took the other, as just as fair, / And having perhaps the better claim / Because it was grassy and wanted wear, / Though as for that the passing there / Had worn them really about the same, / And both that morning equally lay / In leaves no step had trodden black. / Oh, I kept the first for another day! / Yet knowing how way leads on to way / I doubted if I should ever co
A sales guy runs out of gas in the Illinois countryside and starts walking, hoping to cadge a gallon or two.
Eventually, as the old joke goes, he spots a farmer and a dog sunning themselves on the front porch of a farmhouse and approaches. Cautiously, he asks, “Does your dog bite?”
“Nope,” says the farmer, whereupon the chap reaches out his hand and barely pulls it away in time to keep it from being chewed off.
“I thought you said your dog doesn’t bite,” he protests.
“That ain’t my dog,” says the farmer.
The old joke may not have any point other than to make us laugh, but, if it does have one, it might be that you need to make sure who something belongs to before you go messing with it, and make sure you’re not confused as to who the real owner is.
2251 Benton Street, Granite City
The parents of a Granite City woman ask the court to sanction a man and his attorney for filing a lawsuit accusing them of failing to protect the man’s brother, who they claim abused their daughter, broke into a home they didn’t own, and was shot and killed when they weren’t there.
Defendants Marvin and Cynthia Mills filed a motion for sanctions through attorney Thomas Maag of the Maag Law Firm in Wood River. They seek sanctions against plaintiff Ronald Wilderness and attorney Derek Rudman of St. Louis “for filing, serving and prosecuting an utterly frivolous case.”