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Bears rookie OT Teven Jenkins feeling 18 years old againMark Potashon December 8, 2021 at 10:25 pm

Bears rookie offensive tackle Teven Jenkins (76) played on two PAT attempts against the Cardinals on Sunday. They were his first snaps of the season after recovering from back surgery in August. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

The second-round draft pick missed most of the season after back surgery in August. He’s unlikely to play on offense with LT Jason Peters in front of him, but at this point he’s just glad to be healthy.

Playing through an injury is part of the toughness that makes football players who they are. Unless your draft status is on the line. Then, sitting out while your teammates carry on is a “business decision.”

Bears rookie offensive tackle Teven Jenkins has lived both of those football realities in the past 12 months. He sat out after getting injured at Oklahoma State to prepare for the draft. But when he felt pain in his legs during introductory practices after being drafted by the Bears, he wasn’t about to become a “100 percenter” — the guy who only plays when he’s 100% healthy. He went from businessman to football player and played through it.

“[In] a new place, new people. Of course you don’t want to show up here and show people [that] if he’s a little hurt, he can’t go. You never want to be that guy,” said Jenkins, the 39th overall pick in the 2021 draft. “If you get a little bit hurt you’ve got to play through it. That’s how football is. If you want to survive, you’ve got to keep on playing. That’s what everybody’s doing.”

And even when the pain lingered as training camp approached, Jenkins kept working and kept hoping that the pain would go away. It never did. In fact, it got worse.

“Ultimately, it was different symptoms from what was going on in college. It was a whole different situation,” Jenkins said. “I probably pushed myself out there a little bit faster because I had that urge … I wanted to get back on the field. I don’t care if it’s hurt, and maybe I did push myself a little bit too much and made it a little worse.

“It’s the pain — [in] my nerves, in my legs, down my legs. It was just terrible. It was unbearable. Sometimes [when] I took steps it was bad. Anything — getting up out of my seat it was bad. It was totally different than what I was dealing with [before].”

It ended up costing Jenkins most of his rookie season when he had back surgery in August. Bears general manager Ryan Pace was confident this was a one-time incident that would not impact Jenkins’ NFL career. “We feel like the issue is fixed,” Pace said in September. “We’re excited about him going forward. We feel like the problem is solved.”

With all due respect Pace and his optimism, that won’t be known until Jenkins proves it on the field. And he took the first steps toward that Sunday against the Cardinals, when Jenkins played left tackle on two PAT kicks by Cairo Santos.

“[It felt] great,” Jenkins said. “I got two snaps on [PATs], so that’s great progression from where it was a couple of months ago. I’m very glad where I’m at.”

The 6-6, 321-pound Jenkins still has a long road on his comeback trail, but the early signs are positive. He said he feels 100% healthy, the best he’s felt in a long time.

“Probably 18 years old — fresh out of high school going to college,” the 23-year-old Jenkins said. “Feel like a young buck.”

The next step is for Jenkins to play on offense, but that could be awhile. Bears offensive line coach Juan Castillo is content for Jenkins to watch and learn from future Hall of Famer Jason Peters — though Castillo didn’t rule out Jenkins playing in short-yardage situations.

“It’s all about trusting the process,” Jenkins said. “[Peters] is a Hall of Famer. He’s greatness. So I have no problem sitting behind Jason Peters right now and learning. Because I trust what the Bears and coach Castillo and coach Nagy have in store for me. I trust them all. And I believe it’s the right path for me.”

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Bears rookie OT Teven Jenkins feeling 18 years old againMark Potashon December 8, 2021 at 10:25 pm Read More »

Jurors start deliberations in Jussie Smollett’s caseMatthew Hendricksonon December 8, 2021 at 9:39 pm

Flanked by family members, supporters, attorneys and bodyguards, former “Empire” star Jussie Smollett walks out of the Leighton Criminal Courthouse as the jury starts deliberations, Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 8, 2021. The 39-year-old actor and singer is charged with lying to Chicago police in 2019 when he claimed he was the victim of a racist and anti-gay attack near his Streeterville apartment. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

The panel of six men and six women, including a Black man, began deliberations Wednesday afternoon following closing arguments fitting for the tabloid melodrama that has surrounded the “Empire” actor’s case since the alleged hate crime was reported to Chicago police.

After seven days on trial — and three years of being battered in the court of public opinion– Jussie Smollett’s fate is in the hands of a Cook County jury.

The panel of six men and six women, including a Black man, began deliberations around 2:42 p.m. Wednesday, following closing arguments fitting for the tabloid melodrama that has surrounded the “Empire” actor’s case since the alleged hate crime was reported to Chicago police in January 2019.

If jurors don’t return with a verdict by 5:15 p.m. they will end deliberations for the day and return Thursday morning Judge James Linn said after a juror alerted him of an evening conflict that prevented him from staying late.

In his closing statement, Special Prosecutor Dan Webb said Smollett broke the law when he reported to police that two white men beat him up on the street near his Streeterville home and looped a noose over his head, when in fact he plotted to have two acquaintances stage the attack as a publicity stunt.

“It’s just plain wrong for Mr. Smollett, a successful Black actor, to outright denigrate something as serious, as heinous, as a real hate crime,” Webb said.

“To denigrate it and then make sure it involved words and symbols that have such horrible historical significance in our country.”

Webb, over a course of two hours, outlined an investigation that involved some two dozen police officers and 3,000 man-hours that concluded with “overwhelming evidence” that Smollett was the mastermind behind the attack.

Prosecutors largely built their case around the testimony of Smollett’s alleged accomplices, brothers Abimbola and Olabinjo Osundairo. The brothers testified that Smollett directed the planning and execution of the attack, including scouting of the location and scripting the racist, homophobic insults they yelled as they rushed him.

Smollett’s lead attorney, Nenye Uche, cast the Osundairos as “sophisticated criminals,” who staged the attack to get paid, at first by getting Smollett to hire them as bodyguards, and then, after implicating Smollett in the crime, seeking a multimillion-dollar payout.

“They did a scam called the blame the victim scam,” Uche said.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
(From left) Abimbola Osundairo, attorney Gloria Schmidt Rodriguez, a man who identified himself as a bodyguard and Olabinjo Osundairo walk into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse for the Jussie Smollett trial Thursday morning.

Webb made much of seemingly odd behavior by the actor, starting with Smollett’s refusal to to hand over evidence to help solve the crime.

“Smollett didn’t want the crime solved,” Webb said.

If Smollett turned his cellphone over to police, investigators would have been led to the Osundairos quicker and if police got his medical records, investigators would have known he only suffered minor injuries, Webb said.

Uche noted that Smollett did give Abimbola Osundairo’s name and phone number to detectives, even though he was reluctant to turn over his own cellphone.

In stitching together an otherwise circumstantial case, jurors will have to weigh whether to believe Smollett, who spent eight hours on the stand, over his alleged accomplices.

In sometimes testy exchanges during cross-examination, Smollett had answers that were either mundane or profound while explaining his actions in the days before the alleged attack and the weeks that followed.

Circling the area where the incident would take place with the Osundairos in his SUV was not rehearsal for the attack, it was the actor’s habit to drive aimlessly while smoking weed with friends. Refusing to turn over his cellphone to police, then offering up only heavily redacted call records, was not an attempt to conceal his communications with Abimbola Osundairo, it was simply a celebrity guarding his privacy, Smollett said.

Webb said the actor’s explanations were so unbelievable, they “lacked any credibility whatsoever.”

“Mr. Smollett went on that witness stand, took and oath to tell the truth, and made many, many false statements to you,” the special prosecutor said. “He lied to you as jurors.”

Webb questioned how Smollett expected jurors to believe that the Osundairos would know exactly where and when Smollett would be leaving his home on a frigid morning of the January 2019 incident.

“How would the brothers ever know where Smollett was going to be right at 2 a.m.?” Webb said. “That doesn’t make any sense.”

Uche countered that Smollett has always been consistent in his story about what happened and had no motive to stage a fake hate crime against himself.

The defense attorney told the jury the case was “built like a house of cards. We all know what happens to a house of cards when you apply a little pressure.”

“Not only does Jussie have a lack of motive he has anti-motive, it’s like anti-matter,” Uche added.

Smollett shied away from the spotlight and didn’t like publicity, even turning down an offer to join singer Alicia Keys on stage at the Grammy Awards following the attack, Uche said. Smollett declined security when it was offered to him, yet prosecutors claimed he was motived to stage the attack because he was unhappy with how the television studio handled a threatening letter he received, Uche said.

“Give me a break,” Uche said.

The Osundairo brothers — the state’s star witnesses — were nothing more than ” slick con men,” Uche said.

“They’re criminals. They’re the worst type of criminals.”

Uche repeated the defense team’s earlier claim the brothers had demanded $2 million to change their testimony at the trial.

Their home was filthy and filled with guns and drugs, Uche said, at one point comparing the brothers to Columbian cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar. Police previously testified only a small amount of cocaine was found at their Lake View family home.

Uche also raised the possibly that additional people were involved in the attack, noting witnesses said they saw a suspicious white man with a rope about an hour before the attack and that a security guard in Streeterville told police three times he saw a pale-skinned man running by.

A cab driver who picked up the brothers before the attack “heard one of the brothers talking to someone” not in the car, Uche said.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
Former federal prosecutor Dan Webb, who was appointed special prosecutor in the Jussie Smollett case, walks into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on Wednesday.

Word that the popular actor had been beaten by two men as he walked home from a sandwich shop on Jan. 29, 2019, quickly made international headlines.

That his alleged attackers had yelled racist and anti-gay slurs at him, doused him in bleach and hung a thin rope noose around his neck in the attack — while supposedly wearing a red hat and shouting then-President Donald Trump’s campaign slogan — elevated the crime to “an attempted modern-day lynching” as now Vice President Kamala Harris tweeted shortly after the news broke.

But rumors that the case was not what it first appeared to be cast a shadow on the actor soon after.

For Smollett, who lost his job on “Empire” and has become a pariah in the entertainment industry in the years since he first was charged, the legal stakes are likely low. The six counts of disorderly conduct he faces each are low-level felonies with maximum sentences of three years, and Smollett likely would be eligible for probation.

Smollett testified that he was riding high in the winter of 2019 and about to film an episode of “Empire” in which his character, Jamal Lyon, was to marry another man — the first gay Black male marriage on network TV. Smollett’s music career was blossoming, and his “Empire” salary had nearly tripled from the first season.

Smollett testified that he didn’t want to call police after the attack, fearing that if it became public that he’d been beaten up, it would hurt his chances of scoring traditionally masculine acting roles. The publicity that came after the assault became news — hoax or not– boosted his profile, and the fallout after police charged him for allegedly staging the hate crime quickly killed his career.

“Since this incident happened have you gotten and secured significant roles in Hollywood or in TV or commercials?” Uche asked Smollett.

“No,” the actor said flatly.

“Did you gain anything?” Uche asked.

“I’ve lost my livelihood,” Smollett said.

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Jurors start deliberations in Jussie Smollett’s caseMatthew Hendricksonon December 8, 2021 at 9:39 pm Read More »

Minnesota cop ‘failed’ Daunte Wright, prosecutor says; defense calls it mistakeAssociated Presson December 8, 2021 at 9:29 pm

In this image taken from pool video, Katie Bryant, the mother of Daunte Wright, testifies Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2021, at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapolis, Minn. ,in the trial of former Brooklyn Center police Officer Kim Potter in the April 11, 2021, death of Daunte Wright. | AP

Kim Potter, 49, is charged with first-degree and second-degree manslaughter. The white former officer, who resigned two days after the shooting, has said she meant to use her Taser on Wright, who was Black.

MINNEAPOLIS — A suburban Minneapolis police officer who said she mistakenly drew her gun instead of her Taser when she fatally shot Black motorist Daunte Wright went on trial on manslaughter charges Wednesday, with a prosecutor saying Kim Potter had been trained how to avoid such deadly mix-ups but still got it wrong.

Potter’s lawyer, though, argued that she made an error, saying, “Police officers are human beings.” And he appeared to cast blame on Wright, saying all the 20-year-old had to do that day was surrender.

Potter, 49, killed Wright during a traffic stop April 11 in Brooklyn Center in a shooting that was recorded by her body camera. The white officer resigned two days later.

Wright’s mother, Katie Bryant, testified about the moment she saw her son lying in his car after he’d been shot. She said she tried to contact him through a video call after losing an earlier phone connection, and that a woman answered and screamed, “They shot him!” and pointed the phone toward the driver’s seat.

“And my son was laying there. He was unresponsive and he looked dead,” Bryant said through tears.

A mostly white jury was seated last week in the case, which sparked angry demonstrations outside the Brooklyn Center police station last spring as former Minneapolis Officer Derek Chauvin was on trial just 10 miles away for killing George Floyd.

Defense attorney Paul Engh told jurors that Potter made a mistake when she grabbed the wrong weapon and shot Wright after he tried to drive away from a traffic stop while she and other officers were trying to arrest him.

Engh said all police had reason to believe that Wright might have a gun and that all he had to do was surrender. And he said Potter “had to do what she had to do to prevent a death to a fellow officer” who had reached inside Wright’s car and was at risk of being dragged if Wright drove away.

Prosecutor Erin Eldridge earlier told jurors that Potter violated her extensive training — including on the risks of firing the wrong weapon — and “betrayed a 20-year-old kid.”

“This is exactly what she had been trained for years to prevent,” Eldridge said. “But on April 11, she betrayed her badge and she failed Daunte Wright.”

“We trust them to know wrong from right, and left from right,” Eldridge said. “This case is about an officer who knew not to get it dead wrong, but she failed to get it right.”

Potter, who has told the court she will testify, was training a new officer when they pulled Wright over for having expired license plate tags and an air freshener hanging from the rearview mirror.

When they found that Wright had an outstanding warrant, they tried to arrest him but he got back into his car instead of cooperating. Potter’s body-camera video recorded her shouting “Taser, Taser, Taser” and “I’ll tase you” before she fired once with her handgun.

Eldridge played extended body-camera video from the shooting for the jury, including the moments right after Potter shot Wright.

Her camera recorded her saying “(expletive) I just shot him” and “I grabbed the wrong (expletive) gun.” After his car rolls away, it shows Potter sink to the curb and sit down, further exclaiming “Oh my God.” Defense attorneys argued in pretrial filings that her immediate reaction bolsters their argument that the shooting was a tragic accident.

The officer that Potter was training that day, Anthony Luckey, testified that during the stop, he smelled marijuana and saw marijuana residue on the car’s console. He also said Wright didn’t have a license and produced an expired proof of insurance that was under another person’s name.

Earlier, Potter’s defense attorney said Luckey discovered there was a warrant for Wright’s arrest on a weapons charge, which led the officer to believe that there was a “substantial chance” that Wright had a gun in the car — he was unarmed — and a restraining order against Wright.

Engh said officers then had no choice but to arrest Wright.

“A court of law directed him to arrest him!” Engh shouted while pounding on the courtroom lectern. He told jurors it wasn’t about expired tags by that point, and that officers also had to make sure the woman in Wright’s car was OK because of the restraining order.

He said this was standard police work and that Potter made an error.

“We are in a human business. Police officers are human beings. And that’s what occurred,” Engh said.

But defense attorneys also have asserted that Potter was within her rights to use deadly force if she had consciously chosen to do so because Wright’s actions endangered other officers.

Prosecutors say Potter had been trained on Taser use several times during her 26-year police career, including twice in the six months that preceded the shooting. They say Potter’s training explicitly warns officers about confusing a handgun with a Taser and directs them “to learn the differences between their Taser and firearm to avoid such confusion.”

Eldridge told jurors that officers are required to carry their Taser on their non-dominant side and their firearm on their dominant side. Potter carried her gun on her right and her Taser on her left.

Officers can choose to position their Tasers in their duty belts so they can either draw it from across their body with their dominant hand or draw it with their nondominant hand. Potter had hers positioned in a “straight draw” position, so she would draw it with her left hand.

“The only weapon she draws with her right hand is her gun, not her Taser,” Eldridge said.

The prosecutor told jurors they would hear about several policies that she says Potter violated, including one that says flight from an officer is not a good cause to use a Taser.

A jury of 14 people, including two white alternates, will hear the case. Nine of the 12 jurors likely to deliberate are white, one is Black and two are Asian.

The most serious charge against Potter requires prosecutors to prove recklessness, while the lesser requires them to prove culpable negligence. Minnesota’s sentencing guidelines call for a prison term of just over seven years on the first-degree manslaughter count and four years on the second-degree one. Prosecutors have said they will seek a longer sentence.

___

Associated Press writer Tammy Webber contributed from Fenton, Michigan.

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Minnesota cop ‘failed’ Daunte Wright, prosecutor says; defense calls it mistakeAssociated Presson December 8, 2021 at 9:29 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: Dec. 8, 2021Matt Mooreon December 8, 2021 at 9:00 pm

Woom Sing Tse was fatally shot Tuesday in Chinatown, a block from where he lived. | Family photo/provided

Today’s update is a 5-minute read that will brief you on the day’s biggest stories.

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be sunny with a high near 33 degrees. Tonight will see increasing clouds with a low around 24 degrees. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a high near 40 degrees.

Top story

Woom Sing Tse worked his way to success after arriving here from China 50 years ago. He was gunned down not far from his home.

Woom Sing Tse came to America nearly 50 years ago with a hundred dollars in his pocket and worked his way up from restaurant cook to restaurant owner.

He retired nine years ago and became a well-known figure in Chinatown, where he played ping pong and headed an association dedicated to the sport.

“He came here for a better life for his family and paved the way for his generation. You know, the immigrant dream to come to America,” his son William Tse said.

Tse, 71, was gunned down a block from his home yesterday afternoon while walking to the store to buy a newspaper. “This senseless murder — we can’t comprehend it. We don’t know why,” William Tse said.

Woom Tse had just finished lunch at home with his wife, the son said. She had meant to make the trip but Tse said it was too cold outside and went to get the newspaper himself.

As he walked down the sidewalk in the 200 block of West 23rd Place, a silver car pulled up and the driver opened fire, police said. Surveillance video obtained by WGN-TV shows Tse falling and the driver stopping, getting out and walking up to the curb and firing again. Tse died at Stroger Hospital.

The driver sped off but was arrested on Jackson Boulevard near the Kennedy Expressway. Police said a gun was recovered but haven’t commented on a possible motive. Charges have not been announced.

The shooting happened across the street from Haines Elementary School, where Tse’s daughter was teaching, his son said.

David Struett has more on the tragic loss of this beloved community member here.

More news you need

After seven days on trial — and three years of being battered in the court of public opinion — Jussie Smollett’s fate is in the hands of a Cook County jury. The panel of six men and six women began deliberations this afternoon following closing arguments.

Facing a lawsuit from former franchisees that alleges discrimination, McDonald’s said today it will commit $250 million in a five-year plan to diversify the ranks of its restaurant owners. This comes toward the end of a year filled with criticism of McDonald’s, with one incident involving the company’s CEO and his texts to Mayor Lori Lightfoot following the shooting deaths of two children.

A 2-year-old boy was left at a South Side fire station Monday afternoon, said fire officials, who took the boy to the hospital for evaluation. The person who dropped off the child isn’t protected under Illinois’ Safe Haven Law, which applies only during an infant’s first 30 days of life.

For the second straight day, increasing opposition is stalling one of Mayor Lightfoot’s legislative initiatives — this time authorization to sign and modify emergency contracts up to $1 million without City Council approval. This comes a day after her plan to lift the ban on sports betting and impose a 2% tax on gross revenues also went nowhere.

State regulators today named their chosen developers to break ground on a new casino in Waukegan and another straddling the border of Homewood and East Hazel Crest. This ends a selection process that dragged on for more than two years due to COVID-19 shutdowns and other delays.

A bright one

Evanescence returns to Chicago, marking 20 years since debut performance here

In 2003, Evanescence had played one of its first shows in Chicago at the Metro, a more-or-less showcase for a band that had just begun riding on the success of a new single and music video for a track called “Bring Me to Life” that pitted the ethereal vocals of Amy Lee against hard-driving rap-rock for an operatic goth mashup. It was wholly distinctive from anything that had been spinning on the airwaves in that time and resulted in a collective chatter of “who is this?”

It’s something Lee remembers as the popular ensemble heads to town again, nearly 20 years later, behind this year’s new album “The Bitter Truth.” The quintet (now also including bassist Tim McCord, drummer Will Hunt, lead guitarist Troy McLawhorn, and guitarist and backing vocalist Jen Majura) will be playing tomorrow one of the shows in the WKQX-FM (101.1) “The Nights We Stole Christmas” series at the Aragon, with Lee professing just how instrumental stations like that one were in the evolution of the band.

“We had this interesting conundrum that I didn’t realize would be a problem initially,” she said in a recent interview. The song, starting with piano and featuring a woman’s voice, was “too different,” she was told, and pitching it to rock stations would be difficult. But after some DJs started playing it on air, “there was this beautiful reaction from people calling in to play it again,” she said. “And I will always remember that. Our fans were a very literal part of getting us here.”

Kaley Nelson
Evanescence frontwoman Amy Lee says she no longer has to fight to prove a woman can lead a rock band.

Though Lee joked, “we’ve improved since then,” even she has to pause over just how much success the band — formed in Little Rock, Arkansas – has amassed, with its debut album “Fallen” ranked as the No. 5 biggest-selling album of the 21st century by Nielsen SoundScan data.

Today, that momentum is carried forward on the dynamic new effort “The Bitter Truth” that debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard rock charts when it was released in March. It’s the group’s first album of new material in 10 years, a span of time that has seen a shift in band members, countless tours and marriage, loss and motherhood.

Lee says the message of the 12 tracks is “pushing through is always better than giving up” and hopes that sharing songs about her own loss can help others heal at a time we are all bearing some heavy weight.

“I think there’s real healing in connecting with other people. That’s what we all really crave deep down, connection and togetherness and to feel understood,” she said.

Selena Fragassi has more on the band’s return to Chicago here.

From the press box

Returning from a rib injury, Justin Fields will start for the Bears against the Packers this weekend.

Blackhawks forward Jujhar Khaira was released from Northwestern Memorial Hospital this morning after taking a vicious hit from Rangers defenseman Jacob Trouba last night. A team doctor said Khaira is undergoing “extensive testing.”
Illinois’ Kofi Cockburn is so good that it’s making Steve Greenberg nostalgic for the days of the dominant big man.
Bears assistant offensive line coach Donovan Raiola has been hired as the new offensive line coach at the University of Nebraska.

Your daily question ?

Where’s the best place to find holiday decorations in Chicago?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday, we asked you: What’s a great local, non-chain store to buy presents from this holiday season?

Here’s what some of you said…

“P.O.S.H. at the Tree Studios on State. So lovely, such great gifts — hostess gifts, tree trimmings, gorgeous kitchenwares and such special toys for kids. Definitely a holiday shopping destination.” — Cathy Ankuda

“Bookie’s in Beverly and Belle Up Boutique, also in Beverly.” — Jane Feurer

“Sprocket & Stone in Hyde Park for pet gifts and treats!” — Sylvia Bridges

“Foursided Cards and Gifts in Lakeview and Andersonville. Great selection of ornaments and many other gifts.” — Aaron Hoffman

“American Science & Surplus. They have so many great gifts for kids and super useful items for the home.” — Emma Rose Goerisch

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: Dec. 8, 2021Matt Mooreon December 8, 2021 at 9:00 pm Read More »

The Packers are the good-looking brother the Bears can’t compete withRick Morrisseyon December 8, 2021 at 9:43 pm

Aaron Rodgers and the Packers almost always walk off the field celebrating after a game against the Bears. | Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

And, so far, nothing points to the future being much different.

It always comes back to the Packers. Always.

Whenever the Bears do anything, whenever they make even the slightest movement, they instinctively look to their neighbor to the north for context. They’re usually handed a bag of humiliation. You’d think they’d stop comparing, just out of self-preservation, but they can’t help themselves. One hundred and two years into their existence, they want to be the Packers when they grow up.

When the Bears win a game against an opponent not from Green Bay, their immediate response is to crane their necks looking for the Packers. They always find them, way up in the standings. When the Bears draft or acquire a quarterback, they look at how he might compare to Brett Favre or Aaron Rodgers or Who’s Next. Not well, as it invariably turns out. When the Bears put a coin in a red kettle, they brace themselves for the possibility that their archrivals have declined a Nobel Peace Prize out of modesty.

Always the Packers.

The two teams play Sunday night in a prime-time game, which means that the Bears’ weekly horror show can’t be partially hidden by a slate of other games. The Packers have Rodgers and Lambeau Field, and the Bears have six losses in their last seven games, the lone victory coming against the hapless Lions. By two points.

When we last left Rodgers in October, he was informing fans inside Soldier Field that he owned them. Having just run for a touchdown, he had looked into the stands and spied a woman giving him a single-finger salute on each hand. Maybe she was saying the Packers should go for two, but I don’t think so. Anyway, Rodgers opined, loud enough for the TV microphones to pick up, that he owned her and anybody else connected to the Bears. All the Bears could do was peruse the deed he’d handed them and nod their heads.

It’s not just Rodgers doing the owning. It’s the Packers. I’ll spare Bears fans the ugly numbers. You already know that your team is in a 30-year-slump against the hated Pack. And there’s nothing you can do about it. Most of you can’t bring yourself to quit the Bears because that would be like lopping off an arm. It means that the Packers won’t stop poleaxing you. Enjoy your pain.

Like a moth to a flamethrower, the McCaskeys also are drawn to the Packers. The Bears owners claim a historical magnetic attraction, both franchises being early members of the NFL. Trust me on this one: The Packers look at the Bears as a food source, nothing else.

Can we at least be kind and say the Bears are pilot fish to the shark-like Pack? No. That would imply that the Bears get some scraps, some symbiotic benefit from swimming near their rival. There is nothing about the team from Green Bay that enhances the life of the team from Chicago.

So what’s left? The Bears are proud that their sinking season hasn’t turned into a soap opera of hard feelings and accusations. Apparently, that’s supposed to be enough to take fans’ minds off the 4-8 record or the bad offense. The Packers, meanwhile, had to deal with Rodgers’ dissatisfaction with the team’s general manager, his deception about his COVID vaccination status and his one-game hiatus after testing positive for the virus. They’re 9-3. Where can the greater Chicago area buy a soap opera and some good football players?

The Bears have managed to turn all the good feelings about the drafting of quarterback Justin Fields into battalions of pointed fingers over who is to blame for his uneven development so far this season. The good news is that, after missing two straight games with cracked ribs, he’ll start Sunday night against the Packers. The bad news is that he’ll start Sunday night against the Packers.

Bears coach Matt Nagy acknowledged the obvious Wednesday, saying his teams haven’t been good enough against the Packers. He’s 1-6 against Green Bay. There’s very little to suggest that he’s going to pick up victory No. 2 on Sunday, though you never know. Actually, yes, you do.

Being dominated so thoroughly and for so long by a rival might cause an organization to pine for a hereafter where suffering doesn’t exist. I have bad news: Sources tell me that when the Bears’ work on Earth is done, they’re destined for the Great Known, where the colors are green and gold, and the quarterback is eternally good.

Always the Packers.

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The Packers are the good-looking brother the Bears can’t compete withRick Morrisseyon December 8, 2021 at 9:43 pm Read More »

Homewood-East Hazel Crest aces out south suburban casino rivals, Las Vegas-based developer wins hand in WaukeganMitchell Armentrouton December 8, 2021 at 8:14 pm

Artist’s rendering of a casino proposed by Wind Creek Hospitality just off Interstate 80 near 175th Street and Halsted, straddling the border of suburban Homewood and East Hazel Crest. | Provided by Wind Creek Hospitality

State regulators rejected bids from Matteson, as well as a Waukegan proposal from a former state senator who poured thousands of dollars into local elections.

Two of the most important cards in Illinois’ massive gambling expansion have finally been dealt.

State regulators on Wednesday named their chosen developers to break ground on a new casino in Waukegan and another straddling the border of south suburban Homewood and East Hazel Crest, ending a selection process that dragged on for more than two years due to COVID-19 shutdowns and other delays.

While the location of the north suburban gambling emporium was never in doubt, the Illinois Gaming Board picked Las Vegas-based Full House Resorts Inc. to set up its high-stakes shop at the shuttered Fountain Square shopping center in Waukegan — though a legal challenge from a spurned competitor could still be looming.

The field was much wider for the south suburban casino license. The state gambling law signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker in 2019 that paved the way for the new casinos pitted a handful of suburbs against each other to bid for what is expected to be a cash cow for south suburban communities that have been economically neglected for generations.

Homewood/East Hazel Crest beat out Matteson with a proposal to build the casino just off Interstate 80 near 175th and Halsted streets. Calumet City and Lynwood were culled from the bidding process in October.

Regulators voted 4-0 to grant findings of “preliminary suitability” for the Waukegan and Homewood/East Hazel Crest bidders. That means they can start laying the groundwork for the casinos, which have been coveted by officials in each of the suburbs for decades.

The Homewood-East Hazel Crest bid is led by Alabama-based Wind Creek Hospitality, part of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians, which runs 10 gambling operations in Alabama, Florida, Nevada, Pennsylvania and the Caribbean island of Curacao. Project partners have promised a $440 million, 64,000-square-foot casino along with a 21-story hotel and an entertainment center.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times file
Donna More, during her unsuccessful run for Cook County’s state’s attorney

The group is represented by former gaming board general counsel Donna More, who also launched a failed bid to unseat Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx in the 2020 Democratic primary election.

The bid from Full House Resorts, a publicly traded company, is behind the $400 million “American Place” Waukegan proposal, which envisions a high-end gambling temple catering to high-rollers — complete with “ultra-luxurious” villas and a helicopter landing pad “to expedite travel time for hotel guests seeking to bypass traffic.”

Provided by Full House Resorts
A rendering of the proposed “American Place” casino in Waukegan.

The Gaming Board had been poised to issue the Waukegan license last month but delayed its decision “out of respect for the judicial process” in a federal lawsuit filed by a foiled bidder.

The Forest County Potawatomi Community sued Waukegan in 2019 after the city voted to eliminate its proposal even though the Wisconsin tribe scored well on the evaluation system. The Potawatomi claimed the process was “rigged” to favor a bid backed by former state Sen. Michael Bond, who poured thousands of dollars into local elections and whose “North Point” casino proposal was rejected by regulators.

The Potawatomi filed for a temporary restraining order to prevent the Gaming Board from moving ahead with its selection until the lawsuit was resolved. Cook County Judge Cecilia Horan turned down the request Tuesday, saying the tribe didn’t have legal standing to hold up the selection.

“The casino is not going to open tomorrow. There are still many, many steps before anyone opens a casino in Waukegan,” Horan said during a virtual hearing.

The selections come two and a half years after Pritzker signed the gambling law that created six new casino licenses, introduced legal sports betting, allowed for slots and table games at racetracks and expanded the number of gambling terminals allowed at gas stations, truck stops, bars and other lounges. The coronavirus put a crimp on the expansion, which has rolled out in fits and starts under the chronically understaffed and overworked Gaming Board.

Of the six casinos, only the Hard Rock in Rockford has started taking bets. Ground was to be broken Wednesday on a new casino in downstate Williamson County. Danville’s revised casino bid is still being reviewed by regulators after an initial proposal fell through.

The most important piece of the gambling expansion — the Chicago mega-casino — is still early in the local selection process. Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office has scheduled public presentations from the five proposals for that license Dec. 16.

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Homewood-East Hazel Crest aces out south suburban casino rivals, Las Vegas-based developer wins hand in WaukeganMitchell Armentrouton December 8, 2021 at 8:14 pm Read More »

Woom Sing Tse worked his way to success after arriving here from China 50 years ago. He was gunned down not far from his home.David Struetton December 8, 2021 at 8:11 pm

Woom Sing Tse was fatally shot Tuesday in Chinatown, a block from where he lived. | Family photo/provided

“This senseless murder — we can’t comprehend it. We don’t know why,” his son said.

Woom Sing Tse came to America nearly 50 years ago with a hundred dollars in his pocket and worked his way up from restaurant cook to restaurant owner.

He retired nine years ago and became a well-known figure in Chinatown, where he played ping pong and headed an association dedicated to the sport.

“He came here for a better life for his family and paved the way for his generation. You know, the immigrant dream to come to America,” his son William Tse said.

Tse, 71, was gunned down a block from his home Tuesday afternoon while walking to the store to buy a newspaper. “This senseless murder — we can’t comprehend it. We don’t know why,” William Tse said.

Woom Tse had just finished lunch at home with his wife, the son said. She had meant to make the trip but Tse said it was too cold outside and went to get the newspaper himself.

As he walked down the sidewalk in the 200 block of West 23rd Place, a silver car pulled up and the driver opened fire, police said. Surveillance video obtained by WGN-TV shows Tse falling and the driver stopping, getting out and walking up to the curb and firing again. Tse died at Stroger Hospital.

The driver sped off but was arrested on Jackson Boulevard near the Kennedy Expressway. Police said a gun was recovered but haven’t commented on a possible motive. Charges have not been announced.

The shooting happened across the street from Haines Elementary School, where Tse’s daughter was teaching, his son said.

‘Epitome’ of the American Dream

After arriving in this country from China, Tse worked and saved and finally owned his own restaurant, first in Dundee in the northwest suburbs, his son said. He sold that location after 20 years and started another in Downers Grove.

He put his three children through school, had nine grandchildren and retired nine years ago. “My dad was the epitome of the immigrant coming to America and taking chances,” William Tse said.

Provided photo
Woom Sing Tse and family

After retiring, Tse settled into life in Chinatown where he was known as a “superior” ping pong player, his son said. He also played basketball and exercised every morning, his cousin Winnie Tse said.

“He was a good man,” said Winnie Tse, 61, who lived next door to him in Chinatown since 1986. “He took care of his family, made money and took care of the three kids. He was a good husband and father.”

William Tse said his father raised him with “tough love” that helped him grow into the successful entrepreneur he is now.

“I know his heart and attention were all right there. Especially in Chinese culture, that’s how it is. It’s this stoic mentality: tough love, you have to suffer before you succeed in life. You take the long road. Nothing is handed to you,” William Tse said.

With his dad gone, William Tse said he’s worried about his mother. “I don’t think she can walk in Chinatown anymore,” he said.

The murder has left Chinatown residents shaken and afraid to go outside, Winnie Tse said.

“Everyone wants to know why because we’ve heard lots of rumors,” Winnie Tse said. “People are scared to walk around Chinatown, but you have to live your life.”

Seven other shootings have occurred this year in the police beat that covers Chinatown and parts of Bridgeport, according to Chicago Police Department data. Two of this year’s shootings happened during robberies. The beat had the same number of shootings in all of 2020.

Tse’s death is the first murder recorded in the beat this year, according to the city data. Last year, the police beat saw five fatal shootings, the most in any year since 1991. The beat had no fatal shootings in the years between 2015 and 2019.

Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, whose 25th Ward covers Chinatown, said he was working with Chinatown community leaders to organize a meeting to discuss public safety in the area.

“Not only is a family grieving the tragic loss of their loved one, but an entire community and nearby school filled with children are impacted by what happened yesterday,” Sigcho-Lopez said in a statement. “It’s going to take all of us together to get past this cycle of violence ravaging our city and we have no time to waste and no more lives to lose.”

Data analysis by Andy Boyle

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Woom Sing Tse worked his way to success after arriving here from China 50 years ago. He was gunned down not far from his home.David Struetton December 8, 2021 at 8:11 pm Read More »

Jurors start deliberations in Jussie Smollett’s caseMatthew Hendricksonon December 8, 2021 at 8:43 pm

Flanked by family members, supporters, attorneys and bodyguards, former “Empire” star Jussie Smollett walks into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on Wednesday. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

The panel of six men and six women, including a Black man, began deliberations Wednesday afternoon following closing arguments fitting for the tabloid melodrama that has surrounded the “Empire” actor’s case since the alleged hate crime was reported to Chicago police.

After seven days on trial — and three years of being battered in the court of public opinion– Jussie Smollett’s fate is in the hands of a Cook County jury.

The panel of six men and six women, including a Black man, began deliberations around 2:42 p.m. Wednesday, following closing arguments fitting for the tabloid melodrama that has surrounded the “Empire” actor’s case since the alleged hate crime was reported to Chicago police in January 2019.

In his closing statement, Special Prosecutor Dan Webb said Smollett broke the law when he reported to police that two white men beat him up on the street near his Streeterville home and looped a noose over his head, when in fact he plotted to have two acquaintances stage the attack as a publicity stunt.

“It’s just plain wrong for Mr. Smollett, a successful Black actor, to outright denigrate something as serious, as heinous, as a real hate crime,” Webb said.

“To denigrate it and then make sure it involved words and symbols that have such horrible historical significance in our country.”

Webb, over a course of two hours, outlined an investigation that involved some two dozen police officers and 3,000 man-hours that concluded with “overwhelming evidence” that Smollett was the mastermind behind the attack.

Prosecutors largely built their case around the testimony of Smollett’s alleged accomplices, brothers Abimbola and Olabinjo Osundairo. The brothers testified that Smollett directed the planning and execution of the attack, including scouting of the location and scripting the racist, homophobic insults they yelled as they rushed him.

Smollett’s lead attorney, Nenye Uche, cast the Osundairos as “sophisticated criminals,” who staged the attack to get paid, at first by getting Smollett to hire them as bodyguards, and then, after implicating Smollett in the crime, seeking a multimillion-dollar payout.

“They did a scam called the blame the victim scam,” Uche said.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
(From left) Abimbola Osundairo, attorney Gloria Schmidt Rodriguez, a man who identified himself as a bodyguard and Olabinjo Osundairo walk into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse for the Jussie Smollett trial Thursday morning.

Webb made much of seemingly odd behavior by the actor, starting with Smollett’s refusal to to hand over evidence to help solve the crime.

“Smollett didn’t want the crime solved,” Webb said.

If Smollett turned his cellphone over to police, investigators would have been led to the Osundairos quicker and if police got his medical records, investigators would have known he only suffered minor injuries, Webb said.

Uche noted that Smollett did give Abimbola Osundairo’s name and phone number to detectives, even though he was reluctant to turn over his own cellphone.

In stitching together an otherwise circumstantial case, jurors will have to weigh whether to believe Smollett, who spent eight hours on the stand, over his alleged accomplices.

In sometimes testy exchanges during cross-examination, Smollett had answers that were either mundane or profound while explaining his actions in the days before the alleged attack and the weeks that followed.

Circling the area where the incident would take place with the Osundairos in his SUV was not rehearsal for the attack, it was the actor’s habit to drive aimlessly while smoking weed with friends. Refusing to turn over his cellphone to police, then offering up only heavily redacted call records, was not an attempt to conceal his communications with Abimbola Osundairo, it was simply a celebrity guarding his privacy, Smollett said.

Webb said the actor’s explanations were so unbelievable, they “lacked any credibility whatsoever.”

“Mr. Smollett went on that witness stand, took and oath to tell the truth, and made many, many false statements to you,” the special prosecutor said. “He lied to you as jurors.”

Webb questioned how Smollett expected jurors to believe that the Osundairos would know exactly where and when Smollett would be leaving his home on a frigid morning of the January 2019 incident.

“How would the brothers ever know where Smollett was going to be right at 2 a.m.?” Webb said. “That doesn’t make any sense.”

Uche countered that Smollett has always been consistent in his story about what happened and had no motive to stage a fake hate crime against himself.

The defense attorney told the jury the case was “built like a house of cards. We all know what happens to a house of cards when you apply a little pressure.”

“Not only does Jussie have a lack of motive he has anti-motive, it’s like anti-matter,” Uche added.

Smollett shied away from the spotlight and didn’t like publicity, even turning down an offer to join singer Alicia Keys on stage at the Grammy Awards following the attack, Uche said. Smollett declined security when it was offered to him, yet prosecutors claimed he was motived to stage the attack because he was unhappy with how the television studio handled a threatening letter he received, Uche said.

“Give me a break,” Uche said.

The Osundairo brothers — the state’s star witnesses — were nothing more than ” slick con men,” Uche said.

“They’re criminals. They’re the worst type of criminals.”

Uche repeated the defense team’s earlier claim the brothers had demanded $2 million to change their testimony at the trial.

Their home was filthy and filled with guns and drugs, Uche said, at one point comparing the brothers to Columbian cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar. Police previously testified only a small amount of cocaine was found at their Lake View family home.

Uche also raised the possibly that additional people were involved in the attack, noting witnesses said they saw a suspicious white man with a rope about an hour before the attack and that a security guard in Streeterville told police three times he saw a pale-skinned man running by.

A cab driver who picked up the brothers before the attack “heard one of the brothers talking to someone” not in the car, Uche said.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
Former federal prosecutor Dan Webb, who was appointed special prosecutor in the Jussie Smollett case, walks into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on Wednesday.

Word that the popular actor had been beaten by two men as he walked home from a sandwich shop on Jan. 29, 2019, quickly made international headlines.

That his alleged attackers had yelled racist and anti-gay slurs at him, doused him in bleach and hung a thin rope noose around his neck in the attack — while supposedly wearing a red hat and shouting then-President Donald Trump’s campaign slogan — elevated the crime to “an attempted modern-day lynching” as now Vice President Kamala Harris tweeted shortly after the news broke.

But rumors that the case was not what it first appeared to be cast a shadow on the actor soon after.

For Smollett, who lost his job on “Empire” and has become a pariah in the entertainment industry in the years since he first was charged, the legal stakes are likely low. The six counts of disorderly conduct he faces each are low-level felonies with maximum sentences of three years, and Smollett likely would be eligible for probation.

Smollett testified that he was riding high in the winter of 2019 and about to film an episode of “Empire” in which his character, Jamal Lyon, was to marry another man — the first gay Black male marriage on network TV. Smollett’s music career was blossoming, and his “Empire” salary had nearly tripled from the first season.

Smollett testified that he didn’t want to call police after the attack, fearing that if it became public that he’d been beaten up, it would hurt his chances of scoring traditionally masculine acting roles. The publicity that came after the assault became news — hoax or not– boosted his profile, and the fallout after police charged him for allegedly staging the hate crime quickly killed his career.

“Since this incident happened have you gotten and secured significant roles in Hollywood or in TV or commercials?” Uche asked Smollett.

“No,” the actor said flatly.

“Did you gain anything?” Uche asked.

“I’ve lost my livelihood,” Smollett said.

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Jurors start deliberations in Jussie Smollett’s caseMatthew Hendricksonon December 8, 2021 at 8:43 pm Read More »

From 1 to 500. It All Started with Elizabeth Holmes.on December 8, 2021 at 8:51 pm

Getting More From Les

From 1 to 500. It All Started with Elizabeth Holmes.

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From 1 to 500. It All Started with Elizabeth Holmes.on December 8, 2021 at 8:51 pm Read More »

2-year-old left at South Side fire stationJason Beefermanon December 8, 2021 at 7:41 pm

A two-year old child was dropped off at a Chicago Fire Department station at 1440 E. 67th St. on Monday. | Sun-Times file

The 2-year-old boy left at a fire station in Woodlawn Monday was taken to a nearby hospital. Illinois law permits individuals to drop off young children, anonymously, but applies only to infants up to 30 days old.

A 2-year old boy was left at a South Side fire station Monday, but the person who dropped off the child isn’t protected under Illinois’ Safe Haven Law, which applies only during an infant’s first 30 days of life.

The child was taken to a Chicago Fire Department station near 67th Street and Dorchester Avenue at about 3:45 p.m. The individual who dropped off the child was met by CFD officials, who transported the boy to Comer Children’s Hospital for evaluation, authorities said.

The child was found to be in good condition, and was released into the care of a family friend appointed by Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. No one is in custody at this time, police said.

The Illinois Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act permits individuals to drop off infants of up to 30 days old to emergency services with complete anonymity, and without fear of civil or criminal liability. CFD officials, however, said personnel at firehouses don’t worry about age limits in such situations.

“The Safe Haven Law is for 30 days [old], but the Chicago Fire Department will not refuse any child that’s being dropped off at the firehouse,” said CFD spokesman Larry Langford. “We will follow the protocol of taking the child for evaluation, and DCFS will then take over.”

The Department of Children and Family Services encourages unwilling parents of newborns to “give their baby a chance” through a “No Shame. No blame. No Names” public-awareness campaign.

“If you are pregnant and unable to keep your baby after it’s born, you may legally hand your unharmed baby, up to 30 days old, to a staff member at a hospital, fire or police station, or emergency care facility,” according to a pamphlet published as part of that awareness campaign.

“You don’t have to give your name or any other information to anyone. You will not be breaking any laws. But, you will be giving your baby the gift of life.”

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2-year-old left at South Side fire stationJason Beefermanon December 8, 2021 at 7:41 pm Read More »