News Briefs
The Markham Journal

News from the Chicago Tribune/Southtown/Suntimes papers

Boy playing with lighter started fire, chief says

June 24, 2007
By David Schwab, The Star

Markham firefighters rescued a 4--year-old boy found hiding under a bed
upstairs while a fire burned downstairs Thursday night.

Markham Fire Chief Ronald Moaton said the boy had started the blaze
accidentally in the downstairs area of the home while playing with a lighter.

The fire started around 9:20 p.m. in the 16400 block of Wolcott Avenue.

The boy's grandmother and uncle, the only other people in the house at the
time, got out of the building while the boy hid upstairs, Moaton said.

When the grandmother got out, Moaton said, she had to be restrained from
re-entering the building to look for the boy.

Firefighters went in instead, eventually finding him upstairs hiding, with only
his arms sticking out from underneath the bed.

Firefighters got him out of the house, and he was taken to Ingalls Memorial
Hospital in Harvey and transferred to Hope Children's Hospital in Oak Lawn
to be treated for smoke inhalation.

According to hospital reports, Moaton said he's "doing much better."

The grandmother and uncle are being treated for burns.

The fire was a serious one, Moaton said, that "engulfed the downstairs area.
The heat was tremendous."

Structural damage to the home was minimal, he said.
David Schwab may be reached at
dschwab@starnewspapers.com


Fired cops back on the job

July 22, 2007
By Kim Janssen, special to The Star

Three fired Markham cops at the center of a yearlong controversy that cost
the city's police commission chairman his job were reinstated Thursday.

Officers Courtney Howell-White, Nicole Wilkins and Max Evans were dismissed
in March after being found guilty of breaking a long unenforced rule that
required officers to live within seven miles of Markham city limits.

Markham's Police and Fire Commission ruled against them even after
commission chairman Roland Ray Ashley -- who had presided over the
officers' disciplinary hearing -- was exposed discussing a plot to fire
Howell-White.

But the seven-mile boundary was retroactively extended to 25 miles last
month by an arbitrator ruling on the city's new police contract, rendering
the officers' dismissal moot.

Deputy Chief Jim Knapp confirmed Thursday that all three officers had been
handed back their badges and would be back on the streets "within a week
or so."

The officers are owed about $150,000 in back pay, while Howell-White is
seeking another $300,000 in legal fees incurred defending herself so far.

All three officers alleged during the hearing that the charges were trumped
up against Howell-White because of a personal vendetta by Chief Pascal
Crawford and that Wilkins and Evans had only later been pursued to give
the appearance of fairness.

Howell-White, who is due to start working again today, said, "I can't wait to
get back -- I love being a police."

Markham Mayor David Webb could not be reached for comment Thursday.
Webb demanded Ashley's resignation in February.

Sun-Times News Group

2 hurt in I-57 crash

By Mary Owen | Tribune staff reporter
July 18, 2007

Two people were hospitalized Tuesday night after a traffic accident on
Interstate 57 in the south suburbs, state police said.

A truck was southbound at about 10 p.m. on I-57 near 159th Street in
Markham when its driver lost control and spun into another vehicle, causing
the truck to flip over several times, said Illinois State Police Trooper Woodrow
Montgomery. It is unclear what caused the driver to lose control.

A man and woman who were in the truck were taken to a hospital with
non-life-threatening injuries, Montgomery said.

State Police are investigating the accident, which shut down the interstate
for about a half hour..


Woman faces Markham arson charges

July 15, 2007
By David H. Montgomery, special to The Star

Deborah Needom has been charged with arson in connection with a fire
that destroyed a home last week in Markham, police said.

Needom, 51, is accused of setting fire to a house rented by her boyfriend,
police said.

The fire occurred about 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in the 2500 block of Elmdale
Avenue. It raged for hours and required firefighters from 10 towns to battle it.

Markham Deputy Police Chief Jim Knapp said the fire was an isolated case
and was not related to a string of unsolved arson fires in the city.

No one was injured by the fire, which burned for more than four hours.

The firefighting effort was complicated by the lack of hydrants in the
neighborhood, forcing firefighters to use tankers to bring water from several
blocks away.

Needom's bail was set Thursday at $75,000. She has a preliminary court
hearing set for Aug. 2.
Sun-Times News Group


Cops say kids left in 2 cars near courts

By Lindsay Kishter | Tribune staff reporter
July 12, 2007

One woman has been charged and another may face prosecution after
separate incidents in which children allegedly were left in sweltering parked
cars, authorities said Wednesday.

On Monday at the Markham Courthouse, a sheriff's deputy found a profusely
sweating 7-year-old girl locked in a car alone about 3:30 p.m., while outside
temperatures reached 94 degrees, officials said.

Her mother, a 24-year-old Chicago woman, was in the courthouse to pay
tickets, sheriff's police said. The investigation is ongoing, and charges are
pending, officials said.

At the Bridgeview Courthouse on Friday, Canada McCullough, 28, of
Merrillville, Ind., left her three children, ages 3, 4 and 5, locked in a car for at
least 30 minutes in 84-degree heat with the windows cracked less than 3
inches, police said. McCullough was charged with child endangerment.

None of the children needed medical attention in either incident, Sheriff
Thomas Dart said. "We feel like we were very, very lucky," Dart said.

He said a parked car can heat up 19 degrees within 10 minutes and 30
degrees within 15 minutes. Cracking the windows has little impact on the
temperature, he said.

The Markham and Maywood courthouses and the Domestic Violence
Courthouse all have designated children's rooms, and the WIC offices in
Juvenile Court buildings have play areas, Dart said. Dart said the incidents
provided impetus for police to step up patrols.
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