Chicago Sports

R. Kelly message from jail: ‘Leave my music alone!!!’

Imprisoned R&B star R. Kelly appears to have released a rare public statement from jail Tuesday, imploring people to “just leave my music alone, because it is all I have left, it’s all my fans have left.”

“And they deserve to be able to listen to the music despite what people try and say about me, what they think about me or even do to me,” the message read. “So please, again, LEAVE MY MUSIC ALONE!!!”

The Chicago Sun-Times received the message through an email service for federal inmates. Jennifer Bonjean, Kelly’s defense attorney, said the note appeared to be an authentic message from her client, though she said it was likely typed by someone else.

Kelly purportedly can’t read or write.

“He has people inside who he dictates to,” Bonjean said. “That’s how he writes me all the time.”

A federal jury in Chicago this year found Kelly guilty of three counts of producing child pornography and three counts of enticing a minor into criminal sexual activity. The jury found that he sexually abused a 14-year-old girl on camera after she asked him to be her godfather in the 1990s and that he enticed two additional girls into criminal sexual activity.

Kelly is already serving a 30-year prison sentence for a racketeering conviction in New York, and he faces sentencing in the Chicago case this February. He is being held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in downtown Chicago.

The new message seems to respond to last week’s news that a collection of Kelly songs had appeared on major music apps. Bonjean told the Sun-Times that “we’ve been investigating this unauthorized release of his music, that was stolen.”

In the note, Kelly not only appears to complain about the theft of his music. He also complains about the loss of his career, his money and his family, as well as his health troubles. The note mentions that, while behind bars, Kelly has suffered from COVID-19, diabetes and tuberculosis. It says he’s had two surgeries.

It also mentions the attack on Kelly by a fellow inmate in 2020.

Echoing her closing argument during Kelly’s trial this summer, Bonjean told the Sun-Times that “the criminal justice system is set up to respond to accusations, but you know, that doesn’t seem to be enough for some people.”

Here is the full message received by the Sun-Times:

LEAVE MY MUSIC ALONE!!! They already got me in here.

They took my voice.

They messed my whole career up.

They took all my money.

They took my kids away from me.

They took me from my family, my friends and all of my fans.

I have had all my emails and phone calls stolen and shared with government witnesses and God knows who else.

I have gotten tuberculosis while being in here.

I have gotten COVID twice while being in here.

I have been diagnosed with diabetes while being in here.

I have had two surgeries while being in here.

I have gotten attacked while I was sleeping, and had my rib cracked and my jaw fractured while being in here.

I have been diagnosed with PTSD while being in here.

I wish they would just leave my music alone, because it is all I have left, it’s all my fans have left.

And they deserve to be able to listen to the music despite what people try and say about me, what they think about me or even do to me.

So please, again,

LEAVE MY MUSIC ALONE!!!

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MIke Leach, Mississippi State football coach, dies at 61

Mike Leach, the gruff, pioneering and unfiltered college football coach who helped revolutionize the passing game with the Air Raid offense, has died following complications from a heart condition, Mississippi State said Tuesday. He was 61.

Leach, who was in his third season as head coach at Mississippi State, fell ill Sunday at his home in Starkville, Mississippi. He was treated at a local hospital before being airlifted to University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, about 120 miles away.

“Mike was a giving and attentive husband, father and grandfather. He was able to participate in organ donation at UMMC as a final act of charity,” the family said in a statement issued by Mississippi State. “We are supported and uplifted by the outpouring of love and prayers from family, friends, Mississippi State University, the hospital staff, and football fans around the world. Thank you for sharing in the joy of our beloved husband and father’s life.”

In 21 seasons as a head coach at Texas Tech, Washington State and Mississippi State, Leach went 158-107.

Leach fought through a bout with pneumonia late in this season, coughing uncontrollably at times during news conferences, but seemed to be improving, according to those who worked with him.

News of him falling gravely ill swept through college football the past few days and left many who knew him stunned, hoping and praying for Leach’s recovery under grim circumstances.

His impact on all levels of football — from high school to the NFL — over the last two decades runs deep and will continue for years to come.

“Mike’s keen intellect and unvarnished candor made him one of the nation’s true coaching legends,” Mississippi State President Mark Keenum said. “His passing brings great sadness to our university, to the Southeastern Conference, and to all who loved college football. I will miss Mike’s profound curiosity, his honesty, and his wide-open approach to pursuing excellence in all things.”

Leach was known for his pass-happy offense, wide-ranging interests — he wrote a book about Native American leader Geronimo, had a passion for pirates and taught a class about insurgent warfare — and rambling, off-the-cuff news conferences.

An interview with Leach was as likely to veer off into politics, wedding planning or hypothetical mascot fights as it was to stick to football. He considered Donald Trump a friend before the billionaire businessman ran for president and then campaigned for him in 2016.

He traveled all over the world and his curiosity knew no bounds. He most appreciated those who stepped outside of their expertise.

“One of the biggest things I admire about Michael Jordan, he got condemned a lot for playing baseball. I completely admired that,” Leach told The Associated Press last spring. “I mean, you’re gonna be dead in 100 years anyway. You’ve mastered basketball and you’re gonna go try to master something else, and stick your neck out and you’re not afraid to do it, and know that a lot of people are gonna be watching you while you do it. I thought it was awesome.”

Leach’s teams were consistent winners at programs where success did not come easy. And his quarterbacks put up massive passing statistics, running a relatively simple offense called the Air Raid that he did not invent but certainly mastered.

As much as Leach enjoyed digging into topics other than football, he was excellent at the X’s and O’s.

Six of the 20 best passing seasons in major college football history were by quarterbacks who played for Leach, including four of the top six.

Calling plays from a folded piece of paper smaller than an index card, Leach turned passers such as B.J. Symons (448.7 yards per game), Graham Harrell (438.8), Connor Halliday (430.3) and Anthony Gordon (429.2) into record-setters and Heisman Trophy contenders.

“You have to make choices and limit what you’re going to teach and what you’re going to do. That’s the hard part,” Leach told the AP about the Air Raid’s economical playbook.

Leach also had a penchant for butting heads with authority, and he wasn’t shy about criticizing players he felt were not playing with enough toughness.

A convergence of those traits cost Leach his first head coaching job. He went 84-43 with the Red Raiders, never having a losing season at the Big 12 school and reaching No. 2 in the country in 2008 with a team that went 11-2 and matched a school record for victories.

But he was fired by Texas Tech in December 2009 after being accused of mistreating a player, Adam Jones — the son of former ESPN announcer and NFL player Craig James — who had suffered a concussion.

He clashed with his bosses instead of apologizing for the conflict, and eventually sued Texas Tech for wrongful termination. The school was protected by state law, but Leach never stopped trying to fight that case. He also filed a lawsuit against ESPN and Craig James that was later dismissed.

Leach was out of coaching for two seasons. He and his wife, Sharon, bought a home in Key West, Florida, where he spent time riding his bike around town and knocking back drinks at the local bars.

He returned to coaching but never gave up that beloved home in the Keys.

Leach landed in the Pac-12 at Washington State in 2012. After three losing seasons, the Cougars soon looked very much like his Texas Tech teams. In 2018, Washington State went 11-2, setting a school record for victories, and was ranked as high as No. 7 in the country.

Leach moved to the Southeastern Conference in 2020, taking over at Mississippi State.

After years of questions about whether Leach’s spread offense could be successful in the nation’s most talented football conference, the Bulldogs set an SEC record for yards passing in his very first game against defending national champion LSU.

Born March 9, 1961, in tiny Susanville, California, Leach grew up in even smaller Cody, Wyoming. Raised as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he attended BYU and later got a law degree from Pepperdine.

“It was hard for me when I was in college, narrowing down what to study,” Leach told the AP.

Leach didn’t play college football, but watching the innovative passing attack used by then-Cougars coach LaVell Edwards at a time when most teams were still run-heavy piqued his interest in drawing up plays.

In 1987, he broke into college coaching at Cal Poly, but it was at Iowa Wesleyan where he found his muse. Head coach Hal Mumme had invented the Air Raid while coaching high school in Texas. At Iowa Wesleyan, with Leach as offensive coordinator, it began to take hold and fundamentally change the way football was played.

Leach followed Mumme to Valdosta State and then to the SEC at Kentucky, smashing passing records along the way. He spent one season as Oklahoma’s offensive coordinator in 1999 before getting his own program at Texas Tech.

From there, the Air Raid spread like wild and became the predominant way offense was run in the Big 12.

Leach’s extensive coaching tree includes USC’s Lincoln Riley, TCU’s Sonny Dykes, Houston’s Dana Holgorsen and Kliff Kingsbury of the Arizona Cardinals.

This past season, Leach’s Mississippi State team finished 8-4, including a 24-22 victory Thanksgiving night over Mississippi in the intense rivalry known as the Egg Bowl. It was his final game.

Leach is survived by his wife and four children, Janeen, Kimberly, Cody and Kiersten.

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2 people killed, 5 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Monday

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2 people killed, 5 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Monday

Two people were killed and five others were wounded in shootings Dec. 12, 2022 across Chicago.

Sun-Times file

Two people were killed and five others were wounded in shootings Monday across Chicago.

A man was shot to death in West Garfield Park on the West Side. The 42-year-old was shot in the abdomen about 4:10 p.m. in the 4400 block of West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he died, police said. A person was shot to death on the Far South Side. The person, age unknown, was outside about 11:55 p.m. in the 8400 block of South Burley Avenue when he was shot, police said. He was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. Witnesses told police the suspect may have been traveling in a car. Hours earlier, a man was shot during an armed robbery in Grand Crossing. The man, 40, was sitting in a car in the 6600 block of South Harper Avenue about 9:10 p.m. when two gunmen approached and demanded his belongings, officials said. The man handed over his cellphone and attempted to drive away and was shot in the head, arm and hand, police said. He was taken to the University of Chicago, where he was listed in critical condition, officials said.

Four others were wounded in shootings in the city Monday.

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REPORT: Chicago Bears running backs expected to change soon

The lineup for the Chicago Bears running backs should change

Different combinations of Chicago Bears running backs have been used since Khalil Herbert was placed on the injured reserve. The Bears went to rookie Trestan Ebner in their game against the Atlanta Falcons. He had a rough game averaging just 1.3 yards per rush in the Bears’ loss. That change at the number two slot for running back wouldn’t be the last one of the year.

The Bears have switched to Darrynton Evans to relieve David Montgomery against the New York Jets and Green Bay Packers. Evans has done better than Ebner but should have less of a workload in the coming weeks.

According to Colleen Kane of The Chicago Tribune, head coach Matt Eberflus said Monday that Herbert should return to the team soon:

“Herbert has been on injured reserve with a hip injury since mid-November, and Eberflus said the Bears expect him to return once he’s eligible after sitting out his fourth game Sunday.

Herbert had 108 carries for 643 yards and four touchdowns in 10 games before he was injured.

“We’re excited about getting him back next week,” Eberflus said. “He’s been working. In fact, I just talked to him in the hallway here a little bit ago, and he’s getting ready to go. He’s been hitting his max speeds and his jumps look good and his power in his legs looks great.”

This will help the Bears’ offense be more lethal in their rushing attack as he’ll be paired again with quarterback Justin Fields, who recently came back from his injury. The two were one of the best running duos in the league before their injuries. The Bears brass will have a chance to evaluate their running back situation with Montgomery’s contract expiring at the end of the season.

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High school basketball: Monday’s scores

Monday, December 12, 2022

BIG NORTHERN

Genoa-Kingston at Rockford Lutheran, 7:00

CHICAGO PREP

Ellison at Rochelle Zell, 7:00

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL

University High at Francis Parker, 6:00

LAKE SHORE ATHLETIC

ACERO-Cruz at Waldorf, 5:00

Beacon at Wolcott, 5:30

Intrinsic-Downtown at Christian Heritage, 6:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – BLUE

DRW Prep at Manseuto, 7:00

Pritzker at Hansberry, 7:00

Rauner at Muchin, 7:00

UIC Prep at Golder, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED-WEST / NORTH

Young at Westinghouse, 5:00

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Bradley-Bourbonnais at Bolingbrook, 6:30

NON CONFERENCE

Belvidere at North Boone, 7:00

Butler at Northside, 5:00

Chicago Academy at Lake View, 5:00

Chicago Tech at Uplift, 5:00

Clifton Central at Reed-Custer, 6:45

Cristo Rey at Kelly, 6:30

Downers Grove South at Plainfield East, 5:30

Dwight at Fieldcrest, 7:00

Elgin Academy at Islamic Foundation, 5:30

Englewood STEM at Ogden, 5:00

EPIC at Excel-Englewood, 5:30

Harvest Christian at Marengo, 7:00

Holy Trinity at CPSA, 5:00

Horizon-McKinley at Universal, 7:00

Ida Crown at North Shore, 7:00

IMSA at Plano, 7:00

ITW-Speer at Hope Academy, 7:00

Johnson at Goode, 5:00

Leland at Our Lady Sacred Heart, 5:30

Marian Central at Wauconda, 7:00

Phoenix at Comer, 5:00

Proviso West at Prosser, 7:00

Rock County Christian at Christian Life, 7:00

Schaumburg Christian at Christian Liberty, 7:30

Southland at Hinsdale Adventist, 6:00

West Aurora at Naperville Central, 7:00

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Blackhawks’ Jason Dickinson searching for offense, appreciating steady role

The scoring explosion Jason Dickinson produced immediately after joining the Blackhawks on Oct. 15 — tallying five points in his first four games, and seven points in his first nine — was a little absurd.

Dickinson certainly wouldn’t have preferred his Hawks tenure start any other way. The fact he flourished immediately indicated he’d landed in the right place. But it also set an impossibly high standard for his production moving forward.

Over time, he has regressed to the mean. Dickinson, a traditionally defensive forward whose career-best offensive season is just 22 points, has recorded only three points — all assists — in his last 13 games.

“[During] times like this where we’re losing, you start overthinking and trying to do too much on one end instead of the other,” he said Monday. “You let certain areas slide. My area that I let slide is offense, because I start thinking, ‘Well, I have to keep the puck out of the net and defend a whole lot harder.’

“That’s where I start to lack. Other guys maybe lack on the other side. I try to constantly get myself to remember I still have to do everything.”

Dickinson’s separation from Sam Lafferty — with whom he experienced such instant chemistry, just as Hawks management had envisioned — has likely contributed. Since Lafferty’s November injury, Dickinson has primarily played with Jujhar Khaira and either Colin Blackwell or MacKenzie Entwistle on his third-line wings.

But with Lafferty back in the lineup, coach Luke Richardson suggested he and Dickinson will soon reunite, potentially with Tyler Johnson — who might finally return from his ankle injury Tuesday against the Capitals — on the other side of them. That trio’s offensive upside would be higher.

And Richardson has urged Dickinson to remain confident despite his scoring drought, regardless. (By this point, the ever-patient coach seems to have given variations of that message to almost every player.)

“Guys like that, you can’t worry too much about offense,” Richardson said. “Then they’re not confident and they’re cutting corners defensively, which is primarily his role. … When he has a start like he did this year, that’s just a bonus.”

The good news is Dickinson indeed is still satisfied with his defensive play of late.

“I’ve been giving up very few inner-slot chances,” he said. “Most of the goals against are rush chances against [after] small breakdowns. … In the ‘D’-zone, I don’t think our line has given up anything. We defend quick, and we get pucks out.”

He doesn’t check the numbers on that himself. When it comes to scoring chances against, he can “pretty much replay them back in my head” and self-evaluate his performance that way.

The numbers do nonetheless support his claim. Over the Hawks’ last eight games, Dickinson has allowed the second-fewest high-danger scoring chances per minute on the team, trailing only Entwistle.

And overall, Dickinson simply feels more stable, consistent and comfortable on the Hawks than he did last season with the Canucks.

He has averaged a healthy 15 minutes per game — sometimes a few more, sometimes a few less, but never has he dipped below 12. And with his contract not up until 2024, he needn’t worry about the slowly approaching trade deadline like many of his teammates.

“It’s hard to believe that it’s already been two months [since the trade], but also only been two months,” he said. “It feels like it’s been forever, but also it’s still brand-new.”

“The biggest thing for me is having a role, having a job, knowing what I’m supposed to do. I didn’t really know what I was doing a whole lot in Vancouver. There was so much turnover for me — game-to-game, period-to-period, shift-to-shift. I’ve gotten a role here and Luke trusts me with it, and that goes the longest way for me.”

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Eagles loom as monumental test for Bears QB Justin Fields

Despite throwing two interceptions as the Bears’ comeback bid crumbled against the Packers two weeks ago, quarterback Justin Fields felt great about his overall passing performance.

Apart from those two misfires, he completed 20 of 23 passes for 254 yards — a season high by far and the third-best total of his young career. It was another in a string of performances in which the bad had to be filtered out to see the good.

It’ll be clear Fields has truly arrived when that’s no longer necessary. The Bears can’t indefinitely dig for positives and unquantifiable progress. At some point, Fields needs to deliver indisputably strong performances without qualifiers and explanations. The top quarterbacks either play well or don’t.

Coming out of their bye week, the Bears’ final four games present Fields with an opportunity to make his closing argument that he’s their answer. However, it’s going to be extremely difficult against the Eagles and Bills — two Super Bowl contenders with top-10 defenses and MVP-candidate quarterbacks who have the firepower to put a game out of reach quickly.

The Bears’ harrowing back-to-back begins Sunday at Soldier Field against the Eagles, who have the NFL’s best record at 12-1 — two games ahead of anyone else. Not only are the Eagles giving up just 19.1 points per game, they’re the hardest defense to throw against in the league.

Fields’ first concern will be a defensive line in which every player has at least six sacks (for context, the Bears’ leader is safety Jaquan Brisker with three). The Eagles are so loaded that likely Hall of Famer Ndamukong Suh comes off the bench for them.

They lead the NFL with 49 sacks, led by linebacker Haason Reddick with 10, putting them on pace for the highest season total since 2000. They’re also No. 1 in opponent passer rating (76.3), interceptions (15) and takeaways (24).

Safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson leads the NFL with six picks, but he’s on injured reserve. Nonetheless, starting cornerbacks Darius Slay and James Bradberry have three each.

No quarterback has a good day against this defense, and it’s a clear step up from anything Fields has faced this season.

“These are the tests that you want,” center Sam Mustipher said after practice Monday. “You want to see what you’re made of. We’ve been hearing, ‘The offense is doing this and the offense is doing that,’ but this is a great challenge for us.”

They’ll surely find that what they’re made of on the offensive line and at wide receiver isn’t enough to compete with an elite opponent like the Eagles, and Fields has been outmanned at every turn this season. But he has managed to overcome that personnel deficit, and being good enough to elevate teammates is one of the job requirements.

He’ll need the offensive line — which likely was reconfigured during the bye, especially with right tackle Alex Leatherwood progressing — to protect him like it did against the Packers. That was the first game without being sacks in Fields’ career.

He’ll also need wide receiver Chase Claypool and tight end Cole Kmet to spearhead the passing attack. Those are two players, like Fields, with much to prove down the stretch.

While the Eagles look like far more than Fields and the Bears can handle at this stage, they’re the type of team he’ll one day have to topple. And he has shown signs that he’s capable of doing it.

After a dismal first four games, Fields has completed 65.6% of his passes, thrown 11 touchdowns and six interceptions and averaged 178.1 yards passing per game for a 94.9 rating. He also has averaged 94.8 yards rushing and run for seven touchdowns.

He has been passing tests all season. Now comes the toughest one.

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Bears rookie Jack Sanborn looks like a keeper, but …

Bears coach Matt Eberflus should be gushing about linebacker Jack Sanborn as one of the few success stories on a Bears defense that — even considering all the circumstances — has been a disappointment in Eberflus’ first season.

An undrafted free agent from Wisconsin and Lake Zurich, Sanborn is the best example yet of the next-man-up philosophy that coaches like Eberflus cherish — an unheralded player overlooked by every NFL team in the draft replacing a two-time All-Pro and putting up similar numbers.

Sanborn is not Roquan Smith. But with 54 tackles in five starts, Sanborn’s 10.8 average is better than Smith’s average in his last five games with the Bears. And Smith was leading the NFL in tackles when he was traded.

But to Eberflus’ credit, he’s holding Sanborn to the same standard he held Smith — it’s not enough. Eberflus made it clear that “ball production” was the reason Smith wasn’t worth the $20 million he was seeking from the Bears in a long-term contract. And Sanborn doesn’t get any dispensations because he’s a rookie or because he wasn’t drafted. He has to be better.

He doesn’t want Sanborn to be just a tackle machine, but a play-maker.

“Sanborn’s been good,” Eberflus said. “He’s been consistent. When I talk about linebackers, it’s about hits on the ball. Can you affect the ball? Are you tackling? Are you punching the ball? Are you taking the ball away?

“He’s had a lot of tackles. He’s improved his tackling. Last week [against the Packers], I thought his tackling was better. His ball production probably needs to improve.”

So while Sanborn has been impressive in his first five games, the audition is far from over. He sure looks like a keeper — a player the Bears can plug into Eberflus’ defense for 2023. But he has to show more to earn that status.

That’s why football was part of Sanborn’s bye week. “Just little stuff with run fits, tackling, tackling lower,” Sanborn said. “I think that’s what the game’s about is improving. Anyway you can improve a little bit, especially in the bye week, you’ve got to do that to go into the next week.”

Sanborn has two sacks, but no takeaways on defense this season. He had a fumble recovery on a punt return against the Falcons on Nov. 20. He had an interception against the Lions on Nov. 13 nullified by a penalty.

But as a football-gene player with a nose for being in the play, Sanborn should have takeaway potential in a better defense. He said he has missed opportunities in the past, and is cognizant of taking better advantage of opportunities to create takeaways.

“I think of them is just punching the ball — forcing fumbles,” Sanborn said. “That’s something that we preach it and we do it so much in practice. It does translate to the game. But at the same time, I thin there are a couple of times where an extra punch here and there maybe could jar the ball loose. That’s enough to change the game.”

Sanborn has the intangibles to make it, things that are overlooked in the draft process. “To be able to handle the huddle and make calls and adjustments — that’s pretty cool for us to watch that,” Eberflus said.

Defensive coordinator Alan Williams sees similar intangibles. “You can’t measure heart. You can’t measure instincts,” Williams said. “The only things we measure — the arm length, the speed — that still doesn’t say, ‘good football player.’

“He transcends that. He may not have the measurable. But he’s a good football player. And that’s what you want — good football players.”

So heading into the final four weeks, Sanborn has one goal.

“I just want to continue to get better, continue to do my job and do it at a really high level,” he said, “[And] helping this team win games. That’s what I’m here for and that’s what I want to do.”

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‘Walking Man’ dies months after being set on fire: ‘An absolute Chicago character’

Over a decade ago, David Jones began to make a documentary about the “Walking Man,” the homeless figure with striking long hair, famous for strolling through downtown Chicago in a blazer, rain or shine.

But the Walking Man — known for being an enigma — never spoke openly with him. “He wasn’t very forthcoming. He was very present, but the answers to our questions were all kind of fibs,” said Jones, who called him the “Walking Dude.”

Jones published a trailer, “The Walking Dude, A Dudementary,” in 2006 but never completed the project. But the trailer was enough, he said.

“It was a fun project to celebrate him,” Jones said. “He an absolute Chicago character — one of the things that makes Chicago unique and exciting.”

The Walking Man, whose name was Joseph Kromelis, died Sunday afternoon.

He was badly burned in May, when someone set him on fire as he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue. He was 75.

His condition improved over several months, but he died weeks after being discharged from Stroger Hospital to a Far North Side rehab facility.

An autopsy Monday found he died of complications from his burns. His death was ruled a homicide.

Jones became fascinated with Kromelis after seeing him walking near the advertising agency he worked at near Michigan Avenue.

“Every time you’re on the street going to or from work, you would occasionally see him. And it would be a thing. People would come back to the office and say, ‘I saw him!'” Jones said.

When Jones gathered footage for the documentary, he staked out Walking Man as if hunting a tornado.

“It was genuinely exciting. It had that feeling of nothing, nothing, nothing and then, ‘Oh my gosh!'” Jones said.

Kromelis walked the streets in a “wild fashion,” Jones said.

“Nothing linear, almost like a moth fly. Up this street, across, diagonal, and back and down. There didn’t seem to be a lot of rhyme or reason, to us. But to him I think it made perfect sense,” Jones said.

“The Walking Man” in downtown Chicago in 2005.

File photo

Kromelis’ appeal also lay in his good nature.

“The streets of Chicago are full of characters, and some are more trouble than others. But the Walking Dude, as we called him, never meant harm to anyone. He just walked the streets,” Jones said.

Jones’ conversation with Kromelis never got beyond small talk. “When we got to bigger talk he’d clam up and have to go,” he said.

They would chat about the city’s architecture and construction projects. “He was almost an amateur architectural tour guide,” Jones said.

Days after Kromelis was attacked in May, a man was charged with attempted murder. Prosecutors said Joseph Guardia, 27, stood silently over Kromelis and poured flammable liquid on him. Kromelis was burned alive for 3 minutes before help came.

The defendant provided no other motive than “being an angry person” and claimed he wanted to burn trash but did not realize there was a person there, according to prosecutors. He remains held without bail at Cook County Jail pending his case.

Prosecutors expect to upgrade the charge against him to first-degree murder, a spokeswoman for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office said.

Six years earlier — on May 24, 2016 — Kromelis was attacked in a separate incident. Someone with a baseball bat beat him in the 400 block of East Lower Wacker Drive. The two were struggling over the bat when police arrived.

Scott Marvel, who heads up Daily Planet Productions, a River North video production company, raised $5,000 for Kromelis by printing and selling T-shirts after he was beaten in 2016. He sold another round of shirts after Kromelis was set ablaze that raised $8,000. He planned to give the money to Kromelis’ family to help fund his recovery.

Joseph Kromelis, better known as “The Walking Man,” in 2011.

Rich Hein/Sun-Times file photo

Now Marvel wonders if the money will go toward covering funeral and burial expenses.

“People would see him and it would make their day,” said Marvel. “He had a spirit about him. I think he represented people who live outside the normal path of society. And how they deserve respect and dignity and compassion. And whatever helps bring us to that could be a lasting memory that turns a negative into a positive.”

Perhaps some sort of memorial or monument would help convey the sentiment, despite the fact that Kromelis eschewed attention, Marvel said.

Authorities have not said who Kromelis’ body will be released to — whether it is a family member or if he will be cremated in the county’s indigent burial program.

He moved to Chicago with his family from Lithuania or Germany when he was a kid and grew up above the bar his parents ran on Halsted, the Sun-Times reported in 2016.

His parents sold the tavern and moved to southwest Michigan when Kromelis was about 19. But he stuck around in Chicago. He tried a factory job but didn’t like it. So he got a peddlers license and sold jewelry on the street and began wandering the streets of the Loop.

“There’s nothing wrong with him. He’s not mentally ill. He just likes walking. It’s that simple,” his sister-in-law, Linda Kromelis, told the Sun-Times in 2016.

Jones, who made the documentary trailer, said he once snuck a homemade “Walking Man” Lego piece into a Chicago exhibit at the company’s Michigan Avenue storefront.

He said he did it “because I thought he was an iconic part of Chicago.”

“Him on the streets made the streets that much cooler and that much more interesting,” Jones said.

A “Walking Man” Lego piece altered by David Jones that was snuck into the Chicago Lego store’s Chicago exhibit.

Photo provided by David Jones

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The Chicago Bulls are in NBA Purgatory

There is one spot you don’t want to be in the NBA, and the Chicago Bulls are in it with few options to get out.

Not bad enough. Not good enough.

As an NBA team, you never want to be stuck in the middle. Not bad enough to get a top pick, but not good enough to be considered a contender. It’s why teams like the Orlando Magic and Detroit Pistons have struggled to gain relevancy, despite being in the lottery constantly.

Going into Monday, the Chicago Bulls are 11-15, good for 11th in the Eastern Conference. They found a creative way to lose just last night to the Atlanta Hawks.

AJ GRIFFIN STRIKES AGAIN FOR THE @ATLHawks WIN #TissotBuzzerBeater #TimingEmotions pic.twitter.com/f5GR7giEmC

— NBA (@NBA) December 12, 2022

The roster, led by Guards Zach LaVine and DeMar DeRozan, seems too talented to be struggling the way they are you would think. Individually, there is the talent that is valued across the league. However, one player makes this roster whole.

Point Guard Lonzo Ball has been out since January 2022 with a knee injury and the Bulls have seemingly given up on figuring out when he’s returning.  Ball completes this team and makes them relevant. Through 24 games last season, Chicago was 16-8 and the surprise of the NBA. Now, they are playing wait-and-see, hoping for good news on Ball’s knee. The problem is, they have no backup plan.

If they were to give up on this season and explore trade possibilities for DeRozan and Center Nikola Vucevic and Guard Alex Caruso, among others, they are no guarantees to get a high first-round pick. Their own 2022 pick is currently owned by the Orlando Magic due to the Nikola Vucevic trade in 2021, a trade they most certainly take back if they could do it over. Unless that pick ends up in the top four, it goes to Orlando. If they end up trading their major players for assets, those teams trading would be sending picks in the 20s or first-rounders beyond 2023. Not an ideal situation.

Okay! Let’s end up bad enough that we secure a top-four pick.

Well…

That would mean Chicago would have to out-tank the San Antonio Spurs, Houston Rockets, Detroit Pistons, Orlando Magic, and Charlotte Hornets to put themselves in a position to land a coveted draft pick. That feels… unlikely, to say it nicely. If those five teams never won another game this season, they wouldn’t be too upset. Can’t do much there, unless you get the luck of the NBA draft lottery,

Okay fine! Let’s win some games!

Well…

The Bulls aren’t very good at that either. They rank 22nd offensively and defensively, according to NBA.com stats and research. It is a headache to try and watch LaVine and DeRozan play my-turn-your-turn offense, with a sprinkle of Vucecic touches inside or as a spot-up shooter. Their bench, a bright spot in the early season, now ranks 22nd in points per game. It’s what makes Ball so great, an effective two-way player who would instantly turn this team into a top-half offense and defense. It’s also what makes this whole season so painful, knowing that we don’t know when Lonzo Ball is coming through that tunnel again.

There’s also Zach LaVine and his new 5 years, 215 million-dollar contract. Is it tradable? Do GM Marc Eversley and EVP of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovs view him as the best player on a championship team type of guy? We don’t know yet. I would say no, as would many Bulls fans, but it’s not our decision. If a team like the New York Knicks came in with a monster offer for LaVine, what does Bulls management say? There is no clear-cut answer.

NBA purgatory sucks. You never know what to think, every game you watch feels like a chore, and your sports life is worse because of it. Unfortunately for Bulls fans, welcome to NBA purgatory.

 

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