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FEATURE
STORY July/Aug. 2006
Supreme in Court
Hailed as
“Prosecutor of the Year,”
Jane Radostits keeps her eye on
the victims of a crime
Jane the dinosaur flashes a toothy
grin across the museum advertisement
taped to Jane Radostits’s
’82 LAS office door. “Jane,”
the caption reads, “was a
mean, lean killing machine and she
is ready for her close up.”
Jane Radostits is not like Jane
the dinosaur. But she does like
a good laugh. “I think a good
sense of humor gets you through
the difficult times,” Radostits
says. As deputy chief of special
prosecutions for the DuPage County
State’s Attorney’s Office,
Radostits knows a thing or two about
difficult times. She once investigated
a crime scene in which the victim’s
three-day-old body was found strapped
in a car’s passenger seat.
She’s heard a murder suspect
confess details of how he strangled
his mother with a shoe string. She’s
had to examine photos of a couple
hog-tied and stabbed to death.
Humor is not the only quality
that has helped Radostits, who was
recently named “Prosecutor
of the Year” by the Illinois
Prosecutors Bar Association, cope
with situations that would make
most people shudder. This mother
of two is a fearless attorney, one
who knew as early as elementary
school that she was destined to
work in criminal justice. By age
17, while interning for the Better
Government Association of Chicago,
Radostits was tackling undercover
investigations. She pretended to
be a patient at an abortion clinic
where doctors were suspected of
performing phony abortions (patients
were told they were pregnant when
they were not), and later posed
as a staff member at a nursing home
to investigate abuse of the elderly.
In recent years, Radostits has confidently
taken on—and won—some
of the most high-profile criminal
cases in the Chicago metropolitan
area, including the case against
Marilyn Lemak, who murdered her
children in Naperville in 1999,
and Billy Lee Warren, who killed
a Downers Grove couple in 1978.
To be a great
lawyer, you need to be a well-prepared
lawyer, advises Radostits. “There
are nuances that you catch when
you read a police report or look
at a photo for the fourth or fifth
time,” she says. “It
just becomes more valuable.”
Raised by a single mother, Radostits
realized at a young age that “you
need to get an education and depend
on yourself to get to where you’re
going in life,” she says.
That mindset stayed with her at
UIC, where she double-majored in
criminal justice and political science
while working odd jobs and commuting
from Orland Park. After graduating
from John Marshall Law School in
1985, Radostits thrived as an assistant
state’s attorney for the Cook
County State’s Attorney’s
Office and was rapidly promoted
through the ranks of its Criminal
Bureau. “Then my boss told
me, ‘Little birdie, it’s
time for you to fly,’”
she says, which encouraged her to
move on to the DuPage County State’s
Attorney’s Office.
In the courtroom, Radostits’s
recipe for success is simple: work
hard. “I don’t think
it’s the smartest or the best
lawyer who wins the case,”
she says. “I think it’s
the person who’s most prepared.”
Though Radostits doesn’t say
so, her strength as a prosecutor
also has to do with her dedication
to the victims in a case. “A
lot of people think that prosecutors’
focus is to put the bad guys away—but
it really isn’t,” she
says. “My focus is on the
victims, whether dead or alive.
That’s who we, as state’s
attorneys, are in the courtroom
for.” —Rachel
Parker
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