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JoAnn Cunningham, 37, was sentenced to 35 years in the murder of her son. The judge said she will have to serve 100% of her sentence. Afterward, she will need to serve an additional three years of mandatory supervised released.

At Thursday’s hearing, Cunningham begged for mercy, but prosecutors asked for the maximum sentence.
 
WOODSTOCK, Ill. (AP) — A northern Illinois woman who subjected her young son to years of physical and emotional abuse culminating in his beating death last year was on Friday sentenced to 35 years in prison.
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Cunningham, her face covered by a surgical mask, did not visibly react in the courtroom after McHenry County Judge Robert Wilbrandt’s ruling.

Cunningham faced between 20 to 60 years in prison. She pleaded for mercy from the judge on Thursday, portraying herself as a loving mother who misses her son.

Wilbrandt acknowledged that Cunningham’s had a “difficult life,” including addiction to drugs despite efforts to get treatment.

“She lapsed back into living in what can only be described as drug-addled filth — lying, cheating and manipulating her way through life while terrorizing her small son,” he said. “While her addictions do not justify her appalling behavior towards her own son, they perhaps do help explain why she engaged in ... the inhumane, repulsive and frankly shocking course of conduct that ended her child’s young life.”

Prosecutors had asked the judge to impose the maximum 60-year sentence so the 37-year-old mother would die in state prison. Wilbrandt said he considered that Cunningham did not plead guilty to a charge of wanton cruelty or a charge that specified she intended to kill her son.

Prosecutors presented evidence that Cunningham physically and emotionally abused AJ for years before the beating that killed him. A police officer who went to the family’s home after AJ was reported missing described the stench of the garbage-strewn house.

McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally said AJ died alone, padlocked inside his bedroom as his brain swelled and his own blood choked him.

Wilbrandt said he hoped examining the “history and the missed signals” in AJ’s case would spare other children “the horrifying result.”

“Miss Cunningham was responsible for that life and now she must be responsible for his death,” he said.
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From the link
AJ’s voice filled Wilbrandt courtroom Thursday morning as prosecutors played multiple recordings of Cunningham berating and arguing with her young son, who told her he wanted bad people to do things to her so she and his brother would leave him alone with Freund. The boy told Cunningham he no longer wanted a family, according to the Herald.
“You don’t have one,” Cunningham responded in one tape. “Do you really think (your dad) would choose you over me and (your brother)? Shut up!”
Freund, who has pleaded not guilty, is awaiting trial on 21 charges, including multiple counts of first-degree murder. The 61-year-old former attorney is being held in the McHenry County Jail.
Cunningham is heard in the recording asking AJ why he wanted her to go away, the Herald reported.
“Why do you want those bad people to hurt me?” JoAnn said.
“So I don’t ever see you again,” AJ responded.

Who would AJ tell to hurt her, Cunningham wanted to know.
“There’s no way we could get in trouble,” she told her son. “Who would you go tell on us to get us in trouble? What would you do? What is your grand plan? How would you get us in trouble? With who? With what people?”
“By bad people, really bad people,” AJ said.
Court documents previously filed in Cunningham’s case indicate the recording, which had a date stamp of March 27, 2019, included video. In the video, AJ had visible cuts and bruises on his face and forehead.
As she interrogates the boy, she “grab(bed) him by the throat and pushe(d) him against the wall, insisting that he tell her who he is going to get her in trouble with, until AJ choke(d) for air,” the records said.
“After AJ says he loves his family, defendant Cunningham responds, ‘bull(expletive), you don’t show it,’” prosecutors wrote.
 
A plea deal between the McHenry County State's Attorney's Office and the father of slain 5-year-old Crystal Lake boy AJ Freund could be on its way, the man's attorney said in court Thursday.

An unshackled Andrew T. Freund Sr. was escorted into a McHenry County courtroom Thursday, clad in the county jail's orange jumpsuit and a surgical face mask. Thursday marked Freund's first court appearance since AJ's mother, JoAnn D. Cunningham, was sentenced to 35 years in prison for her part in the boy's death.

Freund's appointed attorney, Special Public Defender Henry Sugden, told McHenry County Judge Robert Wilbrandt that he was having "pretty serious conversations" with prosecutors about reaching a potential negotiated plea. The attorney declined to say what 61-year-old Freund might be willing to plead guilty to or how much time he could receive.

Sugden said he hopes to have the terms of any possible plea bargain worked out by Freund's Aug. 28 court date.

Freund pleaded not guilty on May 10, 2019, to first-degree murder and other charges stemming from AJ's death.

Prosecutors have previously said they were disappointed with the sentence that McHenry County Judge Robert Wilbrandt issued Cunningham on July 17. The sentence also came as a disappointment to AJ's surviving family, who said they hoped the 37-year-old mother would receive the maximum 60-year sentence.

Sugden, who sat through Cunningham's two-day sentencing hearing, said details revealed through testimony and the woman's psychological evaluation helped bolster Freund's defense.

"She basically admitted that she did it," Sugden said after court Thursday. "If you read the psychological report, she didn't even know where he was when it happened."
 
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Two DCFS caseworkers that investigated abuse of AJ Freund, who was murdered in 2019, were arrested on Thursday and are facing felony charges.

The McHenry County Sheriff’s Office announced Thursday evening that arrest warrants had been served on Carlos J. Acosta, 54, and Andrew R. Polovin, 48.

Acosta and Polovin were both charged with two felony counts of endangering the life of a child and one felony count of reckless conduct, according to the sheriff’s office.

Both men were taken into custody without incident and transported to the McHenry County jail Thursday evening.

The sheriff’s office said they will not be publicly releasing any additional relating to the investigation at this time. Court records for the case are not yet available.
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Acosta and Polovin are being held on $20,000 bonds each and both will appear in court Friday morning.

The search warrant was seeking the complete personnel file, training transcripts and employee evaluations of former Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) supervisor Andrew Polovin, according to the Northwest Herald.

“From the Inspector General’s report, it is indicated that Mr. Polovin’s lack of supervisory oversight was willful and [wanton], given the nature of the injury, the explanations that had been given and rejected by police and unsupported by medical examination …” Diviacchi said in the affidavit at the time.

Polovin was the supervisor of caseworker Carlos Acosta, who was assigned to the case. They closed the case after attributing the bruising to the family dog, despite AJ telling an emergency room doctor, “Maybe someone hit me with a belt. Maybe mommy didn’t mean to hurt me.”
 
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Andrew Freund Sr. has been sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in the murder of his 5-year-old son after accepting a plea deal to lesser charges on Friday.

Freund pleaded guilty to aggravated battery to a child, a Class X felony, involuntary manslaughter, a Class 3 felony, and concealing a homicidal death, a Class 3 felony.

He will serve 11 years and 7 months on the first charge, 14 years on the second charge, and 5 years on the third charge, according to McHenry County Judge Robert Wilbrandt.

As part of the plea deal, Freund also agreed to be interviewed by FBI and work with the DCFS investigation, Wilbrandt said.

Freund will receive day for day credit for the time he has already served in the McHenry County jail. Under truth-in-sentencing guidelines, Freund will not serve the entire sentence.

On July 17, Wilbrandt sentenced AJ Freund’s mother, JoAnn Cunningham, to 35 years in prison for first-degree murder.

Records show she is expected to be released on April 24, 2054. She entered the prison with over a year of credit for time served in the McHenry County jail awaiting trial.

Cunningham will be required to serve 100% of the 35-year sentence. She will have to serve three years of mandatory supervised release after being released from prison.

Cunningham read a prepared statement at the end of the hearing.

“I have vowed to take this tragedy that I created and help whoever I can possibly help. I am a child of God. I am a loving, kind, passionate woman who has feelings and loves deeply. I’m human,” she said.

“As I stand here with all the hurt and pain I caused, I beg for forgiveness. Ask for compassion, love and mercy. My heart and mind failed me and my loved ones, and unfortunately, I cannot go back and change that,” Cunningham added.

 
I wish they would not attempt to locate the father because he is probably a low-life like the egg.

Terminate her rights destroy any evidence that connects this egg to the baby and forget this woman after she

is locked up for good.

Find a family for the baby in another state and allow her the chance to grow up love and nurtured.
But you know they will drag this out. Keep that baby tumbling around in the system until she needs therapy for years and never recover from her hell beginning.
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That video
"I would give my life to have AJ back"

What she really means: if AJ hadn't died I would be free.
 
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JoAnn Cunningham, currently serving a 35-year prison sentence for the murder of her 5-year-old son, A.J. Freund, says she suffered from postpartum psychosis and saw demons and heard voices prior to the murder.
Shaw Local News Network reported Cunningham made the claim in a court petition asking for relief.

She also said she asked a priest, a chaplain, and her husband, Andrew Freund, Sr., to perform an exorcism around the time of the boy’s murder.

Her handwritten request did not specifically say what type of relief she is asking for.

The McHenry County State’s Attorney has not commented on Cunningham’s petition.
 
Wow what a disgusting fucking bitch. So has she been suffering this psychosis over 5-6 years at least? She treated her oldest boy this way as well, and AJ like this for years before he succumbed. That newborn didn't cause a damn thing, they are just extremely lucky they even survived tbh. I'm confident they will see through this horrific joke this bitch is telling and not do a damn thing for her. God I hope she ends up 6ft under sooner than later.
 
Try again bitch, your baby wasn't born until after you were arrested, so there goes your post partum psychosis claim. You just can't admit that you are just a mean ass bitch strung out on drugs who loved beating up on your little boy who couldn't fight back.
That’s exactly what I was thinking, but then I thought maybe she had another one earlier. Guess I’ll go back and read the beginning again.

Not that I buy it either way. What a twat.
 
Ok, reading back A.J. had a younger brother that was removed after AJ died. Doesn’t say how old or what condition he was in at the time. He also had an older brother that his maternal grandmother fought hard for custody of and won.
Guessing mom cut her off after that and never let close enough to see what she was doing to AJ.
So many questions about these awful people and every awful person around them that did nothing to save this little boy.
 
Her asking for compassion?? Telling people she was a loving woman and a good mother to her children!! The things people say!! The solid evidence in this case proves her to be an abusive person who verbally and physically attacked her children on a regular basis! I hope her pen mates treat her in the same way she treated her children!
 
A judge convicted a former state child welfare worker Friday of child endangerment in connection with the 2019 beating death of a 5-year-old suburban Chicago boy by his mother, but the judge acquitted the man's supervisor.

Lake County Judge George Strickland found Carlos Acosta, 57 of Woodstock, who was a case investigator for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, guilty of the child endangerment charge but acquitted him of a reckless conduct charge, news outlets reported.

Strickland said he could not find Acosta’s supervisor, Andrew Polovin, 51, of Island Lake, guilty of either charge because he did not know how much Polovin knew about the abuse of the boy, Andrew "AJ" Freund of Crystal Lake.
 
Finally a social worker being held accountable

A judge sentenced a former Illinois state child welfare worker to six months in jail Thursday in connection with a 5-year-old boy's death.

Lake County Associate Judge George Strickland also ordered Carlos Acosta to contribute $1,000 to a local children's advocacy center and perform 200 hours of public service, the Chicago Tribune reported.
Strickland acquitted Acosta of reckless conduct but convicted him of child endangerment in October in connection with the death of Andrew “AJ” Freund of Crystal Lake. Acosta was accused of ignoring numerous warning signs that the boy was being abused prior to his death.
The boy died in April 2019 after his mother, JoAnn Cunningham, beat him. She is serving a 35-year sentence for his murder. The boy's father, Andrew Freund Sr., was sentenced to 30 years in prison for covering up the killing by burying the boy's body in a field.


Police took AJ into protective custody in December 2018 after an officer noticed a large bruise on the boy's hip. The officer had visited the boy's home after his mother called police to report her ex-boyfriend had stolen her cellphone and a drug used to treat heroin addiction.
A doctor recommended that the boy not be released to his mother but Acosta ended protective custody and let the boy go home with his father. The judge found that Acosta's reports repeatedly omitted potential signs of abuse, such as marks on the boy's face and the family's terrible living conditions.
 
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