Fair with Haze
71°
DeKalb, IL
Fair with Haze|Forecast »

Championship, investigation and conviction: The year in review

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Jack D. McCullough is escorted into the DeKalb County Courthouse by Sheriff's deputies Ray Nelson (back left) and David Rivers (front right) on Sept. 4. (Kyle Bursaw – kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

Related Links

In some years, the vote among Daily Chronicle staff members on the top local story of the year is a close one.

This year, the conviction of Jack D. McCullough in the 1957 kidnapping and murder of 7-year-old Maria Ridulph was the unanimous choice for the most important local story of the year.

McCullough’s being charged in the case was our top story for 2011.

The conviction capped one of the oldest cold case trials conducted in American history and solved a mystery that had lingered in Sycamore for 55 years.

The vote for No. 2 was close, with a narrow margin separating the “coffee fund” investigation at Northern Illinois University from the NIU football team winning its second Mid-American Conference title and securing a berth in the Orange Bowl, the school’s first BCS bowl berth.

For the first time, this year we offered viewers of our website, Daily-Chronicle.com, the opportunity to choose their top 10 stories.

Their choices were a little different from those of our news staff: In the viewers’ vote, NIU’s Orange Bowl berth edged out the McCullough conviction. The Orange Bowl appeared on 83 percent of ballots, McCullough on 79 percent.

Like our staff, audience members had a choice of 22 stories, and only one story viewers ranked in the top 10 – the IHSA state football championships coming to NIU in 2013 – did not appear on the Daily Chronicle staff list.

1. McCullough convicted

One of the nation’s oldest cold cases to go to trial likely ended with 73-year-old Jack D. McCullough being sentenced to life in prison for murdering a 7-year-old Sycamore girl 55 years ago.

McCullough, a 17-year-old known as John Tessier when Maria Ridulph was murdered Dec. 3, 1957, was among 100 or so people who initially were suspects. He told investigators he had been traveling to Chicago that day for a medical exam to join the Air Force.

He was indicted last year after his half-sister, Janet Tessier, came forward and told police about incriminating comments their mother made just before their mother died in 1994. At his sentencing hearing Dec. 10, McCullough maintained his innocence, while his attorney asked for a 14-year prison sentence, the minimum allowed under 1957 statutes.

Previous Page|1||||

Reader Poll

How often do you attend organized downtown events in your community?

Often
Sometimes
Rarely
Never