Free! DINNER - BISTRO BAR • DESSER T New Hours:
~ formerly Antioch Report
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 2017 DISPLAY ADS (262) 877-2813
VOLUME 05 • NUMBER 49
CLASSIFIEDS (262) 728-3411
DELIVERY (262) 728-3411
147 E. Main Street, Twin Lakes, WI 53185 • Published By Southern Lakes Newspapers, LLC
Tues.-Sun. 4:00
p.m. - close “Open every day fo r private events & ca tering”
www.davidsbistro.com 883 Main Street, Antioch • 847-603-
Celebrating Earth
279536
SERVING THE VILLAGE OF ANTIOCH AND TREVOR
1196
Twin Lakes man receives $1 million bond Jankovich accused of kidnapping, invasion charges
STAFF WRITER
JUDE KAIDER Hi-Liter
Trustee Dawn Czarny, left, discusses the Lindenhurst Community Garden with Maira Ochoa and her daughter, Alina, 3, at the Lindenhurst Earth Day Celebration held at the Village Hall, 2301 East Sand Lake Rd., on Saturday, April 22. The village’s Park District runs the garden, which make 10-square-foot plots available to both residents and non-residents for a small fee. Visitors to the event also had an opportunity to speak with vendors of eco-friendly products and to government agencies and businesses dealing with the environment, as well as learn about recycling everyday materials.
A 20-year-old Twin Lakes, Wis., man accused of holding his ex-girlfriend captive in her Illinois home received a $1 million bail in Lake County Bond Court April 17. Tyler Jankovich, who was arrested by federal authorities in Southern California, faces six felony charges related to the March 7 incident in Round Lake Park. Round Lake Park Police said Jankovich forced his way into his ex-girlfriend’s home, where he ordered her and an infant girl to an upstairs bathroom for about two hours, and in turn, started to damage property. “Jankovich began destroying items in home,” a police press release states. “The female attempted to escape and sustained an injury to her face.” However, according to the news release, she de-escalated the matter and eventually convinced Jankovich to allow her to leave the bathroom, pending specific conditions. Those conditions includ-
ed the female calling Jankovich on his cell phone to keep an open line communication for at least 30 minutes. Tyler When she Jankovich heard the sound of Jankovich’s vehicle driving away, she contacted her current boyfriend via text message, but there was a 20-hour delay in reporting the incident to police. The next day, the victim’s boyfriend flagged down a Round Lake Park police officer, who responded to the home in the 400 block of Kenwood Drive at about 1:30 p.m. About four hours later, Twin Lakes police officers checked to see if Jankovich was at his residence in the 2900 block of 400th Avenue, according to Twin Lakes Police Department logs. When local police officers could not find him, Round Lake Park police issued an
See JANKOVICH, Page 2
279539
By Jason Arndt