BLOOMINGTON (AP) — The sentencing hearing has been delayed for a Bloomington woman convicted of strangling her mother-in-law in 2011.
A jury in December found Misook Wang guilty of first-degree murder in the death of 70-year-old Wenlan Linda Tyda of Crest Hill in September 2011.
WJBC Radio (http://bit.ly/VvyZFA ) reports that Judge Robert Freitag has delayed the sentencing to March 1 after receiving a letter from Wang, who also goes by Misook Nowlin. In the letter, Wang alleges her attorney provided ineffective counsel during her trial.
Freitag has scheduled a hearing Friday to discuss that issue.
During her trial, Wang admitted paying someone to lure her mother-in-law to central Illinois with a job offer. But Wang said she choked her with a purse strap and sweater in self-defense during a struggle.
State News
Sentencing delayed for woman in 2011 killing
- State News
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Democrats to try again on Madigan's pension bill
CHICAGO (AP) — A solution to Illinois' worst-in-the-nation state pension crisis remained far from reach Friday, as legislative leaders and Gov. Pat Quinn said they would try again to pass a plan backed by House Speaker Michael Madigan — one that failed in the Senate last month and is unlikely to pass next week.
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Coroner: S. Illinois police chief kills self
FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS, Ill. (AP) — A coroner says a southwestern Illinois police chief who was suspended after being accused of felony misconduct has committed suicide.
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Storms pelt Midwest with rain, winds, hail
CHICAGO (AP) — A massive line of storms packing hail, lightning and tree-toppling winds began rolling through the Midwest Wednesday evening and could affect more than one in five Americans from Iowa to Maryland before subsiding.
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Daley set to challenge Democratic governor in Ill.
CHICAGO (AP) — A rare intra-party battle began taking shape Tuesday among big-name Democrats in Illinois, as former White House chief of staff Bill Daley positioned himself to try to unseat a governor he blames for failing to resolve the state's financial crisis and other pressing issues.
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Math professors find work of teenage Lincoln
If the discovery of some teenager's math calculations written out nearly 200 years ago doesn't seem too exciting, consider the student: Abraham Lincoln.
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DOC official quits after harassment investigation
The deputy director for the Illinois Department of Corrections' southern district has resigned following investigations of sexual harassment.
Continued ... - Despite windfall Illinois still lags on bills
- Gov: Lawmakers must 'do their job,' fix pensions
- Quinn calls pension session after credit downgrade
- Illinois-run insurance marketplace stalls again
- Quinn prepared to call special session on pensions
- Ill. Legislature passes concealed carry law
- House OKs Medicaid expansion, 'puppy lemon' law
- Ill. House approves guns plan opposed by governor
- Ill. Senate approves health-coverage exchange plan
- 5 dead in Ill. van crash part of Christian group
- New Ill. House gun bill excludes parks, transit
- Ill. House committee approves Medicaid expansion
- Ill. Senate panel endorses ammunition limit
- Senate Democrats want more school money, not cuts
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Democrats to try again on Madigan's pension bill



