Joyce settles into position

Creating alternative courts, prosecuting Sheley among her priorities

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Trish Joyce, Whiteside County state’s attorney, is shown during a debate with her challenger Pat Liston hosted by Sauk Valley Media before the election. Joyce took her oath as the new state’s attorney Friday, 3 weeks after defeating Republican and former Assistant State’s Attorney Pat Liston in the Nov. 6 general election. (SVM file photo)
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Joyce has hit the ground running. She is keeping ASA’s Terry Costello, James Fagerman, Carol Linkowski, and Brian Brim, and she has hired two new attorneys: Jennifer Kelly, a local lawyer who will help out with specialty courts, and Tom Senneff, a longtime attorney who will handle misdemeanors and traffic cases and team with Joyce on civil matters.

She did not invite Liston to stay on.

Joyce said she favors a team approach to cases and expects her assistants to jump in on any cases or court hearings when needed.

She also intends to practice what she preaches. While she won’t count out help from her assistants, she intends to lead the more serious cases.

“The buck stops with me,” she said.

Under Spencer, the assistants took turns being the on-call attorney during the week and weekends.

Joyce put herself into that rotation, too.

“I think as state’s attorney, not only should you be willing to be a team player, but you can’t ask your assistants to do anything that you would not do,” Joyce said.

One of the biggest challenges ahead is the constantly mounting caseload, she said.

Joyce said there is a “hit list” of aging cases that the attorneys will evaluate to see whether a plea agreement can be made or whether the case will go to trial.

“If the defense is the cause of the delay, we need to stand firm and indicate to the court that we’re ready, and hopefully the court will put their feet to the fire and set these matters for trial,” she said.

One of her goals is to establish programs such as a county drug court and mental health court. The first step will be making sure the necessary players – judges, probation and police officers, treatment agencies and the like – are on board.

Once the players commit, they must get training and apply for grants. That could take at least a year to accomplish, but it is something she’s committed to. She also has received offers from Lee and Ogle counties to observe their programs.

Eventually, she also would like to see courts for veterans and more programs for juvenile offenders, she said.

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