Chicago Sun-Times

Police considerin­g whether to release brothers from Lyons

- BY TOM SCHUBA AND MADELINE KENNEY Staff Reporters

Two brothers who were taken into custody Saturday after authoritie­s found two containers with human remains in their back yard in Lyons could be released without charges as the Police Department awaits the results of the pending autopsies and attempts to determine whether foul play was involved.

The brothers allegedly told investigat­ors during a well-being check Thursday that they buried their mother and sister in the yard at the home in the 3900 block of Center Avenue. But on Sunday, the Cook County medical examiner’s office didn’t rule on the cause and manner of death for either of the two people who were found in the yard, and neither has been identified.

Lyons Police Chief Tom Herion said his department could bring a charge of concealmen­t of death, a Class 4 felony. But he’s reluctant to do that, fearing a quick guilty plea would prevent further prosecutio­n under the double jeopardy clause.

“If you ... got charged with the Class 4 felony … the first thing I would do — my attorney would tell me to do — is immediatel­y plead guilty, and the case would be over and now you could not charge me again,” he said. “Even if they found out my mother or sister were poisoned or bludgeoned, or whatever it may be. And now your case is done. I just can’t let that happen.”

While police can hold the brothers for 48 hours without charges, he said letting them free after that window closes would be “the prudent thing to do” as long as the cause and manner of death haven’t been establishe­d. Still, he left the door open to more serious charges being filed if new evidence emerges.

“Could you imagine if we charged them with [concealmen­t of death] and then the medical examiner goes up and says, ‘This is a homicide, this is a homicide?’ And we can prove murder, and now we can’t charge them,” said Herion, who said it could take up to three months to finalize autopsy results.

During the dig on Saturday, the two brothers had been sitting under a tree down the street from their home. They said they were concerned about their pets that had been in the home, saying that several animals were also buried in the yard.

The Sun-Times is not identifyin­g the brothers because they haven’t been formally charged.

Over the next two days, Herion said, police are expected to get a warrant to search the brothers’ cluttered and filthy home, which has been boarded up.

“We gotta get clean-up crews, hazmat teams. They’ve gotta be outfitted in breathing apparatuse­s. It’s gonna be a disaster,” Herion said of the search. “Due to the fact that I was already in that place, I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. … I couldn’t get out of there fast enough.”

The home had come to the attention of authoritie­s when public works officials noticed water had not been used there for more than a year, leading to the well-being check and the brothers’ grim revelation­s.

The brothers allegedly told police they buried their mother in the yard in 2015 after their sister pushed her down a flight of stairs. Two years later, they also buried their sister out back, they allegedly told police. Their father, however, died in a hospital in 2017, the brothers allegedly said.

Though several neighbors raised alarms about the brothers’ mental health, they were recently released from a hospital after undergoing medical and psychologi­cal evaluation­s.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? A Cook County emergency truck is parked near a house in suburban Lyons on Saturday where remains were found in a back yard.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES A Cook County emergency truck is parked near a house in suburban Lyons on Saturday where remains were found in a back yard.

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