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IU signee Colson Montgomery drafted in 1st round by White Sox
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MACABE BROWN / Courier & Press via Imagn Content Services, LLC
If Colson Montgomery ever makes it to Bart Kaufman Field, the Hoosiers will have one heck of a prospect on their hands. Thing is, the likelihood of that arrival ever happening feels pretty low.
That’s because the Chicago White Sox selected the Southridge High School star shortstop with the No. 22 overall pick in Sunday’s first round of the Major League Baseball Draft. MLB.com ranked the 6-foot-4, 190-pound infielder as the No. 25 overall prospect in this year’s draft pool, while The Athletic’s Keith Law ranked him as the No. 56 overall talent.
Aide to Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson charged with rape
Updated Apr 07, 2021;
Posted Apr 07, 2021
Alexander Lackey, 35, was secretly indicted on March 22 on charges that accuse him of sexually assaulting a woman multiple times between October 2018 and January of this year. The abuse started when the girl was 17 years old, according to court records.
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CLEVELAND, Ohio An aide to Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson is charged with rape and sexual battery in a secret indictment that was unsealed last week, according to court records.
Alexander Lackey, 35, was secretly indicted March 22 on charges that accuse him of sexually assaulting a woman multiple times between October 2018 and January of this year. The abuse started when she was 17 years old, and took place at Lackey’s home on Broxton Avenue in Cleveland, according to court records.
The pandemic’s unintended consequence bail reform in Cuyahoga County: Leila Atassi
Updated Mar 14, 2021;
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CLEVELAND, Ohio – Is it possible, that while we were all preoccupied with surviving a pandemic, the criminal justice system in Cuyahoga County quietly took an important step toward achieving a judicial reform that keeps poor defendants from languishing in jail unnecessarily?
It appears that’s what happened this fall, when Common Pleas Administrative and Presiding Judge Brendan Sheehan gave his colleagues his blessing to begin using personal bonds to release defendants charged with low-level felonies, effectively thinning the jail’s population and letting defendants go to work and care for their children while awaiting trial.