Sentencing delayed: Dancer suffers heart attack
Western News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years AGO
Ten weeks after William Dancer was convicted of embezzling more than $400,000, he has received a second sentencing continuance – this time because he reportedly suffered a heart attack.
Dancer’s attorney, Scott Hilderman, filed a motion Tuesday to continue his sentencing, which was scheduled for Thursday.
“The reason for this motion is that the undersigned received a telephone call earlier today from defendant’s wife, Maria Dancer, who stated that William had a heart attack and was in the Intensive Care Unit at the Holy Family Hospital in Spokane, Wash.,” read Hilderman’s motion.
Hilderman included a letter written by the director of social services at Holy Family Hospital that stated that Dancer was admitted Tuesday and that he was “critically ill in our Intensive Care Unit.”
The three-sentence letter did not mention his specific health problems.
District court judge Michael Prezeau granted the continuance and scheduled a status conference Dec. 21 to determine Dancer’s health condition and how to continue forward.
Dancer was convicted of three counts of felony theft by embezzlement at his retrial last September for pocketing customer payments intended for his former employer, Sagle, Idaho-based Independence Home Center Inc.
Prezeau granted Hilderman’s first motion to continue last month, moving Dancer’s sentencing from Nov. 13 to Dec. 10, in order to give the defense more time to respond to the pre-sentence investigation, a report prepared by the county that suggests a sentence.
ARTICLES BY WESTERN NEWS
Deadline for fisheries improvement grant is May 31
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks reminds landowners, watershed groups and others that this summer’s deadline to apply for Future Fisheries Improvement Program grants is May 31.
Troy Softball Takes Two From Drummond
The Drummond High School softball team rolled into Troy Saturday with high hopes of ending a long streak of being on the wrong end of the score, and for half of the first game of the doubleheader, looked like they had every chance of doing just that. However the host Trojans exploded for nine runs in the bottom of the fourth inning, and then shut down Drummond in the top of the fifth, winning 14-3. Troy kept the bats hot in the second game, plating 21 runs to end that game early as well, 21-11.
Action on Quiet Waters Initiative expected May 26
The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission will act on the Quiet Waters rule proposal in a meeting rescheduled for 8:30 a.m. May 26 at Montana WILD.