
Judge rejects doubling bond for man charged with drunkenly driving against Lake Station parade
Yakel, 56, of Portage, is charged with felony battery by means of a deadly weapon, criminal recklessness, resisting law enforcement and four misdemeanor counts that include resisting law enforcement, operating while intoxicated, and reckless driving.
He has pleaded not guilty.
Prosecutors also filed Tuesday to add a Habitual Vehicular Substance Offender, which would add one to eight more years if he is convicted since it's his fourth OWI case.
His trial is currently set for December.
In testimony, Lake Station Police Officer Chance Boney recapped what happened at the July 3 parade.
Charging documents allege Yakel came 'extremely close' to hitting several groups of people, clipped Lake Station Fire Chief Chuck Fazekas' back with his vehicle's mirror and came two feet from hitting a three-year-old girl collecting candy in the grass.
His BAC was 0.355%, the detective said – over four times the legal limit.
Deputy Prosecutor Madeline Clement argued Yakel was a flight risk and danger to the community.
Defense lawyer Lonnie Randolph II retorted that paying a $150,000, or $15,000 cash bond, was setting the bar so high that no reasonable person could afford it — essentially keeping any poor person in jail.
He admitted Yakel had OWI cases from 1994, 2008 and 2014. Clement argued it was a pattern.
Judge Salvador Vasquez agreed with Randolph, saying he couldn't remember a move to hike a bond like that in over a decade. However, if Yakel posted bond, he ordered him to be on a SCRAM monitor to track his drinking and home detention.
Randolph also argued his client's SUV could have had 'mechanical problems' that explained why he didn't stop when a police officer tried to pull him over. Vasquez ordered that the vehicle be checked out at a Portage home at a later date.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
29 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
My bathroom scale is rigged, and so are my book sales. Lawsuits and pink slips to follow
I stepped on my bathroom scale the other morning and could not believe the three digits staring up at me. And I mean that literally — the scale was rigged. I know this because I've been dieting my butt off, and I swear I've dropped 20 pounds. So the first thing I did was ask my wife whether she messed with the scale as some kind of prank. She said no, adding, 'Maybe you're retaining liquids.' I threw the scale out immediately. Then I went back into the bathroom, took one look in the mirror, and got another shock. That couldn't be me in the reflection. No way. I've got more hair than that. Everybody knows it, and people comment on it. I go onto social media and people are asking one another, almost every day: 'How does he maintain such a full mane and youthful glow?' I called my barber and fired him. It's not the barber, my wife said. You should take another look in the mirror. She's been somewhat out of sorts lately, ever since I went on Nextdoor to wish all my neighbors a happy Independence Day, including 'all you scum I wouldn't speak to IF YOU WERE THE LAST ONES at the picnic.' Half the time, my wife doesn't even live with me, and I don't know where she is. It's odd, because the marriage is perfect. People ask us what the secret is, and I say it's hospitality. We open our hearts and our home to others, and we were planning on building a backyard ballroom until our financial advisor told us we were already running up massive debt. I sued him for negligence and financial fraud. My wife brought home a couple of refugees sponsored by her church, and I went along with it, even though I think it's wrong to blame coyotes every time a neighborhood pet disappears. We were having a cup of coffee and a few pastries, and one of them took a second almond croissant. And then, even before he finished it, he reached out and grabbed a bear claw. There I am, watching it disappear, and between bites, this freeloader starts telling us our country has to offer more help to his country. I couldn't take it anymore. 'I wanted the bear claw!' I said. 'You didn't even say thanks for the croissant, and now you want a third pastry? Get out of my house!' To calm myself, I slipped into the living room to relax with a book. I picked one that was on a shelf next to three books I've written, which made me curious about how sales have been going lately. So I went to Amazon to check the rankings. The first book I checked was ranked 3,907,369. I swear on the Bible, which, by the way, was ranked 206 on the bestsellers list. Really? Matthew, Mark, Luke and John have been in the ground for what, a couple of thousand years? Nobody can tell you whether any of them knew a Magi from a Musketeer, not to mention that the Roman Empire they worked under was a failed administration. And their book is selling better than mine by a mile? That should be on the list of fake miracles, right up there with the loaves and fishes. My book is a great book. It's already listed up there with the all-time classics, and it got starred reviews everywhere. At Barnes & Noble, they keep it in the Beautiful Books section. When I was on a book tour, I had the biggest crowds ever. Way bigger than Hemingway. People are still talking about it. So to cut to the chase, I gave my sales rank a Triple F rating. Fake. False. Fony. And I fired my book agent. I checked out some of the books ranked higher than mine — other than the 'holy' Bible — and it didn't take long to figure out what's going on. First of all, a lot of the people allegedly 'buying' books don't exist. Somewhere between 30% and 40% of the people who go onto the review section and claim they love Stephen King books are actually dead. And then you have a lot of people coming into this country illegally, ghastly people, and they are voting in elections and they are voting on books, too, because they're being put up to it, and being well-compensated, I might add. Little-known fact: The vote-counting machines and the book-counting machines are made by the same company. You know what they should call that company? RIGGED! Not to be obsessive, but I've heard it said that Stephen King doesn't care for me much, and that's fine. Water off a duck's back. My dog has more talent than that guy. All he does is write stories about killers and horrible, sick people. He should write a book about my neighbor, if he likes deranged people so much. Most neighbors love me; they're kissing my you-know-what. But then there's this guy, whom I'm having investigated. I went out to the curb to throw the bathroom scale away, and what do I see? That jackalope is putting his trash can on my property. I'm the one who's encroaching, he tells me, and I should go to the county offices and check the property records. Well, it just so happens that I already checked the records, and they're inaccurate. It figures, because that last county administration was the worst in history. A bunch of corrupt, evil people. Who should have been impeached. They hired incompetents as surveyors, so don't stand on the street and tell me where I can and can't put my trash can, because the boundaries are rigged and I'm having them rewritten. My lawyers are on it, and we will win this case on Day One, guaranteed, with time left over for a round of golf. Note to self: On the way home, pick up a bathroom scale.


American Press
5 days ago
- American Press
DNA Doe Project helping crack cold cases of unidentified John and Jane Does
More than 50,000 bodies remain unidentified — unmourned, unnamed, but not forgotten — across the country. Jennifer Randolph plans to change that. Randolph is the director of the nonprofit group DNA Doe Project, which uses genetic genealogy to help law enforcement crack the their most confounding cold cases of unidentified John and Jane Does. Their efforts have been documented in the new six-part investigative series 'Naming The Dead,' which premieres today on National Geographic's channel and streaming service. Through distant DNA matches, historic census reports and sheer determination, the group of 80 volunteers aims to give these victims a name and a chance at justice. 'Genealogy sort of started out as a hobby for me. I have scientific training in terms of my occupation so getting into this specific area of applying genealogy to these kinds of cases really married that science background with my fascination with genealogy,' said Randolph, who has degrees in anthropology and epidemiology. 'It ended up being a perfect melding of all my interests.' Randolph said the DNA Doe Project accepts cases from law enforcement agencies or medical examiners when other identification methods have been exhausted. As part of the process, DNA is extracted from the remains and sequenced into a digital format that can be used for comparison to other living relatives. That sequence is then uploaded to databases such as GEDmatch and the search begins. If matches are found, the project's volunteers build family trees based on the shared DNA segments, tracing back to common ancestors then narrowing down the list of names until a potential match can be made. Once that match is identified, law enforcement verifies the identity through DNA samples from immediate family members. Randolph said the process is a gripping testament to the power of identity and the people who refuse to let the lost be forgotten. 'Our mission really resonates with our volunteers, who are all genetic genealogists,' Randolph said. 'I would say that many of our genealogists love, well, genealogy of course, but also puzzles and mysteries because you're trying to solve this logic puzzle in a way. I think that kind of challenge is very attractive to them. There's also the ability to restore names to these individuals, give them their dignity back and provide answers to their families, as well.' Randolph said her team does not pick and choose their cases. 'We've been fortunate enough that we have been able to mostly take on any case that comes to us, although with the greater popularity of this technique, the more and more agencies that see how successful it is, our funding has now been outstripped by demand,' Randolph told the American Press through Zoom. 'Sometimes agencies have to wait awhile until we have adequate funds to work their case going through the lab.' DNA Doe Project is a nonprofit humanitarian organization that is funded by donations. 'The more funding we get, the more cases we can take on,' Randolph said. 'We're really hoping this show will be an opportunity to showcase our work and maybe an interest among people who might be donors.' Randolph said some cases have been solved within an hour or two and others have taken as long as five years. 'For the family of the Doe that we're identifying, that's going to be the most important case we ever do,' she said. 'We care about every case. We give 100 percent effort, but there are some cases where we might have some sort of personal connection — whether it be geography or life circumstance — that really resonate with us because we feel we can identify with them. 'For me, the cases that stick with me the most are those cases when we identify someone — usually a female — and we find out that they had children who grew up thinking their mom abandoned them because they did not care only to discover that they were not abandoned and in fact their mother was taken away from them,' she said. 'I just imagine that it is so difficult to put your head around this idea that your mom left and then to suddenly realize no that's not what happened and have to readjust everything. I really feel for those kids, even as adults.' Randolph said the DNA Doe Project has helped solve one Louisiana case so far and two cases are going to be 'up and coming.' If people want to help, Randolph said they can take direct-to-consumer tests like AncestryDNA and 23andMe, download their profile and then upload it to databases the DNA Doe Project is allowed to use — GEDMatch, FamilyTreeDNA and DNA Justice. 'These are very personal decisions so people should always read the terms of service and understand how their information is going to be used before they make this decision, but if they are willing that can definitely help us,' she said. 'They might be that match that we're waiting for to blow a case open.' Randolph said it's the families of the unidentified individuals who fuel her passion. 'I just imagine what it must be like in their shoes,' she said. 'Many of them are going decades without knowing. It's this ambiguous loss; they don't know if their loved one is still living, if they passed away, do they just not care to maintain a relationship. It's a very difficult position to be in and your mind can go in a million different directions.' Randolph said while her team cannot give families the answers they hope for because the organization deals with those who are deceased, they can offer them a resolution. 'I won't say closure because I don't think it's that, but it is a resolution so that they can truly process their loss because now they understand what it is and they can grieve appropriately,' she said. 'In many cases, the remains can be returned so they can bury their loved one as they would want to. It's not the news they want, but at least it's something. These individuals who are identified mattered, they deserve to not just disappear. We want their names recorded and their lives recorded.'


Chicago Tribune
30-07-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Judge rejects doubling bond for man charged with drunkenly driving against Lake Station parade
A judge rejected a Lake County deputy prosecutor's bid Wednesday to double Richard Yakel's bond to $15,000 for allegedly driving drunk against the Lake Station Independence Day parade. Yakel, 56, of Portage, is charged with felony battery by means of a deadly weapon, criminal recklessness, resisting law enforcement and four misdemeanor counts that include resisting law enforcement, operating while intoxicated, and reckless driving. He has pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors also filed Tuesday to add a Habitual Vehicular Substance Offender, which would add one to eight more years if he is convicted since it's his fourth OWI case. His trial is currently set for December. In testimony, Lake Station Police Officer Chance Boney recapped what happened at the July 3 parade. Charging documents allege Yakel came 'extremely close' to hitting several groups of people, clipped Lake Station Fire Chief Chuck Fazekas' back with his vehicle's mirror and came two feet from hitting a three-year-old girl collecting candy in the grass. His BAC was 0.355%, the detective said – over four times the legal limit. Deputy Prosecutor Madeline Clement argued Yakel was a flight risk and danger to the community. Defense lawyer Lonnie Randolph II retorted that paying a $150,000, or $15,000 cash bond, was setting the bar so high that no reasonable person could afford it — essentially keeping any poor person in jail. He admitted Yakel had OWI cases from 1994, 2008 and 2014. Clement argued it was a pattern. Judge Salvador Vasquez agreed with Randolph, saying he couldn't remember a move to hike a bond like that in over a decade. However, if Yakel posted bond, he ordered him to be on a SCRAM monitor to track his drinking and home detention. Randolph also argued his client's SUV could have had 'mechanical problems' that explained why he didn't stop when a police officer tried to pull him over. Vasquez ordered that the vehicle be checked out at a Portage home at a later date.