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‘Harlem’: If only everyone could have friends as funny and likable as theseRichard Roeperon December 3, 2021 at 2:00 pm

Grace Byers (from left), Shoniqua Shandai, Jerrie Johnson and Meagan Good play the close-knit friends in “Harlem.” | Prime Video

As the prof sizing up herself and her inner circle, Meagan Good leads a knockout cast playing charismatic New York women.

The “Sex and the City” revival titled “And Just Like That” is just around the corner, but in the meantime, we have the Amazon Original series “Harlem,” which has obvious parallels to “SATC” but carves its own unique, hilarious, smart, sexy way as we follow four Black women living in Harlem and leaning on each other as they navigate their respective personal and professional paths.

Created by Tracy Oliver (“Girls Trip”) and with Pharrell Williams and Amy Poehler among the executive producers, this is a celebration of Black culture in America and specifically in Harlem, as the longtime friends have reached that point in their lives when traditional society expects them to have attained certain career achievements and perhaps even romantic commitments, but let’s just say life is still a Work in Progress (to name-drop another terrific series) for all four. This is a beautifully photographed, crisply written, tightly edited series, with crackling good performances from the four beautiful leads and some wonderful guest-star supporting turns from comedic legends Whoopi Goldberg and Andrea Martin. (It also contains more than a sprinkling of frank and raunchy dialogue and explicit sex scenes.)

Throughout Meagan Good’s career, she often has risen above some not-great material, but she’s given a great vehicle here and delivers the performance of her career as Camille, a promising and well-liked anthropology professor at Columbia who serves as our narrator and tour guide, often drawing upon her vast knowledge of the dating practices of various cultures to add texture to her love life as well as the romantic and sexual escapades of her three closest friends:

Tye (a screen-commanding Jerrie Johnson), a pioneering queer businesswoman who has created a successful dating app but insists on always being control of her short-lived relationships, as she prefers hooking up and moving on over true and lasting intimacy.
Quinn (the endearingly vulnerable Grace Byers), a trust-fund fashion designer and hopeless romantic whose business is struggling, in large part because she wants to save the world and give back nearly all of her profits.
Angie (a hilarious and confident Shoniqua Shandai), a larger-than-life presence and aspiring singer-actor who has no social filters and is living rent-free with Quinn and takes full advantage of the situation — but Angie is the first to admit that, so that somehow makes it OK with Quinn. (Angie is also a fiercely protective friend who WILL be there when Quinn needs her, and that also goes a long way.)

The storylines in “Harlem” aren’t particularly groundbreaking, but they’re relatable and real. Camille talks the talk about being an independent, socially committed, stand-alone force — but when she sees her dreamy ex-boyfriend Ian (Tyler Lepley) on the street after a year, she practically melts and essentially turns into a rom-com character from the 1990s. Quinn feels guilty about her privileged upbringing and really wants to make a go of it on her own, but she’s constantly turning to her mother (Jasmine Guy) to replenish her funds. Meanwhile, Tye is stunned by a visitor from her past in a plot turn straight out of a soap opera.

Still, even when “Harlem” is relatively predictable, the dialogue is sharp, and the performances are excellent. There’s also plenty of social commentary, but it’s often served in hilariously absurd (yet somehow plausible) circumstances. The great Andrea Martin of “SCTV” fame does a brilliant comedic turn as Camille’s mentor, an esteemed and ultra-liberal educator who speaks at a rally and says one thing that is deemed offensive by a certain segment of the crowd, which leads to her saying ANOTHER thing and then ANOTHER thing, and just like that, she’s canceled. We also get a greatly amusing subplot about Angie getting cast in “Get Out!” the musical, which is as ridiculous as it sounds and wasn’t exactly sanctioned by Jordan Peele.

The best part about “Harlem” is that cast. Within a handful of episodes, we find Camille, Tye, Quinn and Angie to be every bit as likable and potentially as enduring as Carrie Bradshaw and friends.

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‘Harlem’: If only everyone could have friends as funny and likable as theseRichard Roeperon December 3, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: Kellen Moore has the potential to be as disastrous as Matt NagyAnish Puligillaon December 3, 2021 at 2:49 pm

As the Chicago Bears start doing their homework on future head-coaching candidates, I’ve seen a lot of push for Dallas Cowboys offensive coordinator Kellen Moore. However, I think Kellen Moore would be one of the worst hires the Bears could make coming off of Matt Nagy’s tenure. I know this is a bold take especially […] Chicago Bears: Kellen Moore has the potential to be as disastrous as Matt Nagy – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bears: Kellen Moore has the potential to be as disastrous as Matt NagyAnish Puligillaon December 3, 2021 at 2:49 pm Read More »

Blackhawks: Win over Washington Capitals is impressiveJames Mackeyon December 3, 2021 at 1:00 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks east coast road trip opened up with a game in the nation’s capital that went to a shootout. The Derek King era in the Windy City has had its highs and lows but has been trending lower as of recent. Struggling to win close hockey games, the Hawks have needed a resurgence and will […] Blackhawks: Win over Washington Capitals is impressive – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Blackhawks: Win over Washington Capitals is impressiveJames Mackeyon December 3, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

The East Ukrainian Village Home Bought High And Sold Lowon December 3, 2021 at 1:30 pm

Getting Real

The East Ukrainian Village Home Bought High And Sold Low

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The East Ukrainian Village Home Bought High And Sold Lowon December 3, 2021 at 1:30 pm Read More »

Notre Dame: A lot to cheer for this weekend with Irish idleVincent Pariseon December 3, 2021 at 12:00 pm

It hasn’t been easy to be a Notre Dame fan this week. They have dealt with a lot of adversity this week after finishing what turned out to be a really good year. After a rough start, they pulled together to end up with an 11-1 record when many thought they would have no chance […] Notre Dame: A lot to cheer for this weekend with Irish idle – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Notre Dame: A lot to cheer for this weekend with Irish idleVincent Pariseon December 3, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago jazz trumpeter Burgess Gardner, who played with greats, taught music, dead at 85Maureen O’Donnellon December 3, 2021 at 11:30 am

Chicago trumpeter Burgess Gardner played with many of the all-time greats in jazz. | Provided

Jazz was more than an outlet for his artistry and a source of income for him. It was a wellspring of Black pride. He also taught music in Chicago’s public schools.

When his trumpet-playing big brother went off to serve in World War II, 9-year-old Burgess Gardner ran to his closet and pulled out his horn.

He went on to play trumpet for more than seven decades, performing or recording with legends including Count Basie, Etta James, Louie Bellson, Ray Charles, the Dells, Woody Herman, B.B. King, King Kolax, Lou Rawls, Sammy Davis Jr., Koko Taylor and Sarah Vaughan. He also taught music in Chicago’s public schools.

Jazz was more than an outlet for his artistry and a source of income to Mr. Gardner. It was a wellspring of Black pride.

“Jazz was developed by our ancestors, and it is a music that is indigenous to this country,” he told the music students he mentored in his native Greenville, Mississippi, according to a 2002 story in the Biloxi Sun Herald. “People all over the world love jazz.”

His Greenville roots helped Mr. Gardner when he arrived in Chicago in the late 1950s. The city was filled with other Greenville emigres. A number were musicians, and they helped him find some of his first gigs.

“Because of playing with Ray Charles and with Basie, his name spread quite a bit — ‘You go to Chicago, see Burgess Gardner, he’s the cat on trumpet,’ ” said his son Derrick Gardner, a jazz trumpeter who has performed with the Count Basie Orchestra and Harry Connick Jr.

Mr. Gardner, 88, of South Holland, died Nov. 20 in hospice care in Schererville, Indiana. The cause was congestive heart failure, according to his son.

Provided
Burgess Gardner (with horn and white boutonniere) with his trombonist-son Vincent (rear, light jacket and dark boutonniere) and trumpeter-son Derrick (left of Vincent). On Mr. Gardner’s right is Wynton Marsalis, head of Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Also shown: drummer Ali Jackson (front left); above him, saxophonist Ted Nash. Pianist Dan Nimmer is behind Derrick Gardner. Behind Mr. Gardner are (from left) drummer Dion Parson and trumpeter Kenny Rampton. Right front: trumpeter Kenyatta Beasley.

Young Burgess grew up in a home filled with music. His mother Ruth, a teacher, played piano. His father Willie worked at a Greenville lumber company known as the Chicago Mill.

His sound was molded by Clifford Brown, “a jazz trumpeter who was in the transition from bebop to hard bop,” Derrick Gardner said. “He went to downtown Jackson [Mississippi] to the record shop and bought a Clifford Brown record. He said it changed his life,” influencing “his concept of improvisation, his phrasing, his articulation.”

Early on, Mr. Gardner played Mississippi juke joints with blues legends including B.B. King.

“B.B. wanted him to join his band full time,” his son said, “but he chose to go to college instead.”

After getting a music degree from Jackson State University, Mr. Gardner taught music in Greenville and Cleveland, Mississippi.

In 1959, he moved to Chicago. At the old C and C Lounge at 6513 S. Cottage Grove Ave., he met a bartender from Greenville and started connecting with musicians. He played with King Kolax at the Tivoli Theatre at 63rd Street and Cottage Grove Avenue.

“Basie came in town and had to do a concert,” Derrick Gardner said. “The great Chicago trumpeter Sonny Cohn recommended my dad.”

Provided
Burgess Gardner: a young man and his horn.

In 1963, Mr. Gardner got a master’s degree in music from Roosevelt University.

He taught music at Harlan High School, Dunbar Vocational and Kenwood Academy.

He performed with his Soul Crusaders, a house band at the old Regal Theater. One night, they watched a new group enthrall the Regal audience — the Jackson Five.

The Soul Crusaders also were featured on a family record label. Mr. Gardner and his brother Walter — who owned Gardner’s One Stop record shop, 746 E. 75th St. — started three labels: Down to Earth, Lamarr and More Soul.

In 1975, Mr. Gardner enrolled at Michigan State University, his son said, where he got a master’s degree in educational administration and a doctorate in music education.

He landed a teaching job at Norfolk State University in Virginia, Derrick Gardner said, then taught at California State University, Fullerton.

In 1983, he performed in the orchestra at the “Motown 25” special, with an electrifying performance by Michael Jackson.

That year, Mr. Gardner released “Music-Year 2000.”

“It was one of the first smooth jazz records,” his son said.

Provided
Burgess Gardner on trumpet at the Jazz Showcase.

Returning to Chicago, he taught at Governors State University, where he directed the jazz band. He performed at the Chicago Jazz Festival with his orchestra, Burgess Gardner’s Well-Oiled Jazz Machine.

Provided
Burgess Gardner was an immaculate dresser, according to friends and family.

Mr. Gardner was an immaculate dresser and fine cook. “His apricot pound cake was ridiculous,” Derrick Gardner said.

Mr. Gardner is also survived by his sons Vincent, a trombonist with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, and Lamarr, daughter Marian, brother Thurman, former wives Effie Gardner and Barbara Gardner and four grandchildren. Services have been held.

He always felt strongly about fair pay for musicians. He’d experienced being underpaid and cheated, so he paid band members on time and in full, Derrick Gardner said.

Mr. Gardner told his students music could mean independence, according to the Biloxi Sun Herald. “I did not have to ask my parents for money because I played this horn,” he said. “If you practice your instrument, it will take care of you.”

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Chicago jazz trumpeter Burgess Gardner, who played with greats, taught music, dead at 85Maureen O’Donnellon December 3, 2021 at 11:30 am Read More »

The costly toll of dead-end drug arrests — a Sun-Times / BGA special reportFrank Mainon December 3, 2021 at 11:30 am

Raymond Galloway, a line cook at a Chicago soul food restaurant, wasn’t able to work regularly for about six months because of his legal troubles stemming from two arrests for possession of small amounts of heroin early this year. | Pat Nabong / Sun-Times

In Chicago, thousands of drug possession arrests are routinely tossed out every year, a Chicago Sun-Times-Better Government Association investigation finds. The cost to taxpayers? Millions. To those arrested? The loss of jobs, housing, freedom.

Raymond Galloway, a 48-year-old line cook at a Chicago soul food restaurant, got arrested on the West Side twice this year carrying small amounts of heroin.

Both times, the courts quickly tossed out his charges. Cook County’s judicial system, under an unwritten policy that even Cook County’s top prosecutor calls a failure, routinely dismisses minor drug possession cases — but usually not until after those arrested spend a few weeks in jail, often with life-changing consequences.

Galloway is among tens of thousands of Chicagoans — mostly Black men — who have been jailed in the past two decades on drug charges everyone knew from the beginning were never going to stick, an investigation by the Chicago Sun-Times and the Better Government Association has found.

The police knew. The prosecutors knew. The judges knew.

Yet no one has put a stop to it.

Along with their freedom and their dignity, Galloway and others have lost jobs and homes and relationships. They’ve had to pay thousands of dollars to get their cars out of the city’s impound lot. And they often struggle to pay bills while fighting their addictions.

“I can’t pay the phone bill,” Galloway said. “I’m two months behind on my rent. Child support, I got kids to take care of. I can’t do anything.”

In addition to the human toll, this constant churn of dead-end arrests costs taxpayers tens of millions of dollars every year.

“What a waste of time and resources to drag people into court on a drug charge and dismiss it,” said Ben Ruddell, director of criminal justice policy for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

“What’s the point?”

Most cases under a gram dismissed

The BGA and the Sun-Times analyzed 280,000 drug possession cases using nearly two decades of court data compiled by The Circuit, a collaborative of news organizations including the BGA and Injustice Watch. The examination disregarded arrests involving marijuana, which has been decriminalized in Illinois.

About half of the drug possession cases in Chicago between 2000 and 2018 — about 140,000 — were dropped at their earliest stages.

And that dismissal rate has soared in the most recent years.

For instance, an examination of all 10,480 cases from 2018 in which drug possession was the most serious charge found that a whopping 72% were tossed out.

These dead-end arrests are the result of a longstanding, commonly understood rule among prosecutors not to pursue criminal charges against anyone caught with user-level amounts — around a gram, according to interviews with judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys as well as an examination of hundreds of case files.

Under Illinois law, all drug possession cases involving less than 15 grams — as little as a single pill of Xanax or a grain of heroin — are lumped together under the same felony offense, making it impossible to isolate statistics for specific quantities.

Brian Ernst / Sun-Times
To give a sense of how much a gram of heroin weighs, it’s about the same as this paperclip.

To examine the lowest-level cases, the BGA and Sun-Times reviewed a random sample of 400 arrest reports from 2018 to determine the exact weight of the drugs listed.

About 95% of the cases involving less than a gram, about the weight of a paperclip, were dropped.

‘A colossal waste’

It’s difficult to find anyone involved in this catch-and-release system who’s willing to defend it or end it.

Cops say they’re obligated to enforce the law.

But even Cook County’s top prosecutor — State’s Attorney Kim Foxx — acknowledges the futility of the endless cycle of arrest and release, which she says has been the norm at least as far back as when as when she first began prosecuting such cases in 2008.

She said young prosecutors almost felt as though they were being subjected to “hazing” when they brought drug possession cases to court.

“My colleagues were, like, ‘You’re never going to get a finding of probable cause on anything less than a half a gram,’ ” Foxx said.

After she was elected state’s attorney in 2016, she told her prosecutors to release low-level drug users after only days instead of weeks.

Foxx said people would typically spend three weeks in jail from their arrest on a drug possession charge to their bail hearing. Then, the case would go to a preliminary hearing, where it was often dismissed.

“My directive was: If we knew these cases were going to be dismissed at the preliminary hearing stage, we would try to dismiss them [earlier] at the bond hearing,” she said.

“Just transporting the people to the courthouse, the sheriff and all, it was a colossal waste to me on a case that was just getting thrown out.”

But the steady flow of drug users into courtrooms continues.

The Chicago police have begun a diversion program to allow some people caught with small amounts of drugs to go into treatment instead of the courts, but the program — which began in 2016 — benefits only a small fraction who meet the stringent entry requirements.

Over the past three years, Illinois lawmakers have unsuccessfully proposed downgrading possession of small amounts of drugs from a felony to a misdemeanor. But the idea follows a national trend of states reducing drug-possession penalties.

In the boldest such reform, Oregon voters recently approved a measure that decriminalizes possession of small amounts of drugs.

Pat Nabong / Sun-Times
Raymond Galloway says that, even though his two drug possession arrests were soon thrown out, he was unable to work regularly for more than six months, resulting in more than $6,000 in lost wages.

‘It was dust, man’

Galloway said he first snorted heroin a few years ago while he was partying with friends. He’d done cocaine before and was curious about heroin.

“I was, like, ‘Damn, this got me feeling good,’ ” Galloway said.

Then, he got arrested for heroin possession — twice.

First, he got caught with 0.2 of a gram of heroin in April.

“It was dust, man,” Galloway said. “I was, like, ‘Y’all taking me to jail for this?’ ”

He had to stay in a halfway house until that case was dropped.

In June, he was arrested for possession of two grams of heroin and ordered to live in another halfway house. That case was tossed out, too. The judge let him return to his Uptown apartment but ordered him not to leave except to get his daily methadone treatment to keep from going into a withdrawal.

“The withdrawal from heroin would kill me,” Galloway said.

Because of his arrests, Galloway was unable to work regularly for more than six months, which he said cost him more than $6,000 in lost wages.

In late September, a judge lifted Galloway’s stay-at-home order.

He returned to work at a soul food restaurant, where he prepares yams, collard greens and other comfort food.

His boss said his absence had “really messed things up.”

Galloway is now free on bail while he awaits trial for his 2020 drug-selling case.

His legal woes are an exception in the majority of drug cases: For seven of 10 people charged only for drug possession, it was their first and only charge since 2000, records show.

The BGA has filed suit against the Chicago Police Department on grounds it failed to turn over body-camera footage of Galloway’s arrests within the time required by law. But the BGA was able to obtain another video of Chicago police drug arrests through the Illinois Freedom of Information Act.

West Side drug arrests

All of Raymond Galloway’s arrests occurred in the West Side’s 11th police district, which is about five miles from downtown Chicago.

The 11th district has twice the drug arrests of any other police district in the city.

In a half-mile radius of the 3400 block of West Chicago Avenue in West Humboldt Park — where Galloway was arrested in April — officers have arrested more than 500 people for drug possession since 2014.

In just four police districts on the West Side — the 10th, 11th, 15th and 25th — there have been more than 23,000 drug possession arrests since 2014.

In the remaining 18 police districts, there were only 17,000 drug possession arrests over the same period.

The blocks surrounding Garfield Park are hotspots for drug sales and violence in Chicago. Garfield Park is in the center of the 11th police district.

The Eisenhower Expy. runs from the suburbs, through the West Side just south of Garfield Park and into downtown Chicago. Sometimes, it’s called the Heroin Highway.

Every day, people pull off the highway to buy drugs in open-air markets on side streets, alleys and vacant lots on the West Side. And every day, some get arrested for having small amounts of heroin, cocaine or illicit pills.


An overhead view of the baseball diamonds in Garfield Park and the neighborhood just west of the park.Brian Ernst / Sun-Times

Movie palaces, fur stores

Decades ago, movie palaces and fur stores anchored a glittering hub of commerce along Madison Street just west of Garfield Park. And about a mile away, Sears once operated a massive distribution center. There were plenty of jobs.

In the late 1960s, riots triggered by the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. burned out sections of the West Side that were never rebuilt. White people fled, and their money went with them.

Sears closed its Homan Square facility in 1987, moving its headquarters to the Sears Tower. Today, the West Side’s population is poor and predominantly Black. Life expectancy in West Garfield Park is 68 years — 15 years less than in mostly white Edison Park on the Northwest Side, according to census data. Jobs are scarce. So are grocery stores.

Sun-Times file
Madison Street and Pulaski Road about 50 years ago.

This is the “constellation of forces” that produces open-air drug markets like the ones on the West Side, according to Dr. Anthony Iton, a national expert on the effects of poverty and racism on public health.

Provided
Dr. Anthony Iton.

“Let me take away your education, let me take away maybe one or both of your parents, let me take away your bank account, your transportation, let me just sort of constrain your choices so dramatically but in a way that you actually see opportunity, but you can’t get to it,” he said.

“That causes enormous stress, and the more stress you have, the more you’re likely to seek ways of short-term alleviation of that stress,” said Iton, senior vice president of health communities with the California Endowment.

‘Good dope sells itself’

Michael Pitts, 36, a Four Corner Hustlers gang member serving a 12-year federal drug sentence, said a West Side heroin operation staffed by four or more people can bring in up to $10,000 a day.

“Good dope sells itself,” Pitts said by email.

And there’s no shortage of sellers. Pitts, who sold heroin in West Garfield Park, said somebody is always “ready to hustle or ‘jug,’ as we call it, once a spot is gettin’ money.”

In a typical open-air market on the West Side, everyone has a job: Some people are lookouts, someone works “security” and holds a gun, and someone else supplies heroin, cocaine or pills to the sellers on the street.

Other parts of the city — even those with similar economic problems — don’t have the same levels of street dealing as West Garfield Park, Humboldt Park, Austin and North Lawndale, all on the West Side.

South Side gangs used to deal drugs outside the Robert Taylor Homes and other public housing complexes. But the high rises were torn down, and times have changed. Much of the street dealing on the South Side is gone, said Roberto Aspholm, author of “Views from the Streets: The Transformation of Gangs and Violence on Chicago’s South Side” (Columbia University Press, 2020).

“Why would I stand on the street corner and expose myself to police and my opposition and the elements if I can just work off of a phone?” Aspholm said. “That’s the transition of the South Side.”

On the West Side, people of all walks of life drive or walk up to the outdoor drug markets. The Eisenhower Expressway and the Blue Line and Green Line trains provide easy access.

In West Garfield Park, people who use heroin — many of them middle-aged and worn-out — trudge along Pulaski Road, crossing empty lots and approaching huddles of men who “sling dope” in the side streets and alleys.

This corridor of the West Side is not only a heroin marketplace, it’s also extremely violent. On just one block in West Garfield Park, five people were arrested on drug charges over the past year, five people were shot, and seven were charged with carrying guns.

Last year, the 11th police district, which includes West Garfield Park, had more killings than many cities. In 2020, for instance, there were 82 killings in the entire city of Minneapolis, compared with 99 in the 11th district.

Pat Nabong / Sun-Times
The Cook County branch court at Kedzie and Harrison avenues, where most of the West Side’s drug possession cases are heard.

‘Officer, it’s not you. It’s just a low amount’

The low-level drug possession cases from the West Side are handled in Cook County’s felony branch court next to the 11th district police station. Most of the cases get thrown out. Defendants are often seen leaving the courthouse with smiles on their faces, some pumping their fists in victory and some skipping out of the door.

“People shuffle up, the case is dismissed, and they sprint out,” said one judge, who asked not to be named. “That’s what I would do. Before someone changes their mind.”

Judges and prosecutors say they’re reluctant to clog courtrooms and jails with people caught carrying a thimble-full of heroin or cocaine.

Nick Roti, a former chief of the organized crime bureau of the Chicago Police Department, remembers being a street cop and judges explaining why his drug cases were being dismissed: “They’d say, ‘Officer, it’s not you. It’s just a low amount. Don’t worry.’ “

Often, officers show up in court only to watch their cases disappear before they’re even called to explain the arrest. Lots of preliminary hearings for drug possession are wrapped up in less than a minute. The defendant’s name is called, he or she walks up, and the case is dismissed.

AP
Retired Illinois Appellate Judge Gino DiVito.

‘It would have taxed our abilities’

Prosecutors decide whether to charge someone with felonies like murders and rapes. But drug charges have always been excluded from that felony review process, in part because prosecutors would have to look at thousands of cases a year. So police officers typically decide whether to charge people with drug possession.

Gino DiVito, a retired Illinois appellate judge who helped create felony review in 1972 when he was a prosecutor, said the decision was left to the cops because there was a mountain of drug possession cases every year.

“It would have taxed our abilities,” DiVito said.

Another reason: They’re the simplest felony cases. Unlike murder cases, drug possession arrests often hinge on the word of the officer. They typically don’t require a confession or witness testimony.

Some defense attorneys say that gives cops too much latitude to stop and search people for drugs.

In their reports, officers often cite “suspicious behavior” in a known drug area as the reason for stopping someone, according to a review of hundreds of arrest reports.

That can mean two people talking outside an Uptown L stop. Or, in Raymond Galloway’s case, chatting with a woman on the street and walking away when he sees a cop.

Arrest reports contain head-scratchers like this one: An officer stopped a woman in Austin in 2015 after she walked through a vegetable garden in the winter. The officer wrote the woman’s actions were “nonamenable to gardening” because snow was on the ground. She was arrested for possession of 0.3 of a gram of heroin. Her case was tossed out.

The steep cost of drug arrests

It’s expensive to lock someone up — even briefly — for having small amounts of drugs.

Kathie Kane-Willis, the Chicago Urban League’s research and policy director, once calculated the cost of jailing people whose drug charges were tossed out. In 2008, while she was an instructor at Roosevelt University, Kane-Willis studied 10 weeks of drug arrests at one Cook County branch court.

Twitter
Kathie Kane-Willis, policy director for the Chicago Urban League.

More than half of the possession cases for drug amounts under 15 grams were dismissed. About 75% of those cases involved half a gram or less of a controlled substance. During the study, about 100 defendants’ cases were dismissed, costing Cook County about $350,000. That included court costs and the cost of jailing those people, the study found.

The BGA and Sun-Times found more than $100 million was spent on briefly housing people in the Cook County Jail on low-level drug possession charges between 2013 and 2018. That figure includes the jail’s payroll and other basic incarceration costs but not medical care.

It’s a small fraction of the jail’s total budget over that period, but Kane-Willis said the money would be better spent helping drug users with their health and housing problems.

“I’ve spent two weeks in jail, kicking dope rather than going to my methadone treatment appointment,” said Kane-Willis, a former heroin user. “Is that a better system?”

Sun-Times file
Nick Roti.

‘A chronic disease’

The Chicago Police Department didn’t respond to requests for comment about officers making low-level drug arrests. But Roti, the former police supervisor, said some low-level drug arrests serve a purpose.

Roti said gang members who run West Side drug markets entrust hand-to-hand sales to “buffers,” people who aren’t in a gang but sell small amounts of heroin to pay for their addiction.

When buffers are arrested for drug possession, they can give up information that helps build cases against violent gang members on some of the most dangerous streets in the city, he said.

Roti said the number of buffers who get arrested by narcotics officers is fairly small. A lot more people who use drugs get arrested as a result of patrol officers responding to complaints from aldermen and residents about drug activity, he said.

Roti said weaker drug laws — like one being contemplated in Illinois that would make possession of three grams of heroin or less a misdemeanor — would benefit drug dealers and make it harder for officers to tackle citizen complaints about drug dealing.

The Chicago police get tens of thousands of such complaints every year.

“How do you answer those calls for service?” Roti said. “Write a couple of tickets and drive away? More people come up, they sell more drugs. People don’t want to live like that.

“No person with a substance-abuse disorder walks around with three grams of opioids in their pocket.”

Three grams of heroin is equivalent to 30 “dime bags” sold on the street, Roti said.

Still, like others in law enforcement, Roti said drug addiction is ultimately a health problem.

“They say, ‘The war on drugs’ — they love to throw that around — they make it sound like it’s a war against addicts,” he said. “I’ve never seen a war on drug addicts. I think people need to look at this more like a chronic disease.”

Frank Main / Sun-Times
A man caught with a small baggie of heroin is taken into custody by Chicago police officers in the 3600 block of West Flournoy Avenue in 2018. He was offered the chance of going into drug treatment instead of jail.

Keeping people out of jail for drugs

Roti spearheaded a Chicago Police Department program that connects arrested people to treatment. The program is for people arrested with less than one gram of cocaine or heroin. They aren’t charged with a crime if they agree to meet with a counselor. But they’re barred if they’ve been charged with selling drugs or have convictions for violent crimes or gun possession.

Participants are in their late 40s, on average, and are typically unemployed, according to the University of Chicago Crime Lab, which is monitoring the program. Since the program started in 2016, police have referred more than 800 people to drug treatment. Some weren’t arrested but walked in to a police station for help.

In a sample of about 50 people in the program, 31% stayed in treatment longer than three months. The program — the largest of its kind in the country — operates in half of the city’s police districts and is expected to expand to all of them.

Addiction experts say keeping people who use drugs out of jail can save their lives. That’s because their tolerance for heroin diminishes in jail. They can risk overdosing if they return to their old habits when they’re out.

Since 2017, Cook County Jail detainees have been asked whether they use drugs, and they get treatment to minimize withdrawals, said Matthew Walberg, a spokesman for Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart. Methadone, Suboxone and Vivitrol have been given to detainees to treat opioid addictions, he said.

Detainees also are handed doses of the overdose-reversal drug naloxone when they exit the jail in case they relapse, Walberg said. More than 18,000 kits containing two doses have been distributed, he said.

“We’ve had some people who were given the naloxone within 40 minutes of leaving,” he said.

Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Gail Richardson (center, in red), an outreach worker for the West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force, provides a man with overdose-reversal drugs including Narcan nasal spray and injectable naloxone along with a syringe. The outreach workers had set up a table near Roosevelt Road and South Albany Avenue on the West Side.

A card table on a sidewalk

In addition to the diversion programs, community outreach groups are going straight to the heroin markets on the West Side to offer help.

Thresholds and the West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force send outreach workers to meet people on sidewalks and street corners. They provide naloxone, clean needles and syringes. They can arrange for them to get methadone treatment if they want to kick their drug habits. They also help people apply for government IDs.

Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Elizabeth Elamri, who lives on the Southwest Side, showed up at a West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force street outreach event to get overdose-reversal drugs.

On a chilly morning in late September, Elizabeth Elamri and her friend Rafi walked up to outreach workers sitting at a card table on a sidewalk near Roosevelt Road and Albany Avenue. They walked away with overdose-reversal supplies. Then, they went down the street and scored some heroin.

Elamri, 56, said she’s had two friends die of overdoses. Rafi said his wife once revived him with naloxone.

“They’re saving lives here,” he said of the outreach workers.

Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Rochelle Wade, with the drug addiction recovery agency Thresholds, shows a man how to use naloxone to reverse a heroin overdose.

Gail Richardson, who said she used to take heroin and was convicted of dealing drugs, is one of those workers.

“I have sat here and cried,” said Richardson, who works for the West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force.

“That once was me,” she said of a man who walked up for help. “When you get up in the morning, heroin is your breakfast and coffee.”

Tim Devitt, Thresholds’ vice president of clinical operations, said even more street outreach is needed. A change in the way drug treatment is defined by the state could help thousands of people, Devitt said. The state will pay for drug treatment that’s performed in a building, but the streets are where most of the need is, he said.

“It’s important to expand that definition to include support and services that happen outside four walls that can include outreach,” Devitt said.

People who use drugs need help with housing, jobs and forming relationships with other people, according to Devitt, who’s excited about the passage of the state’s Housing is Recovery law, which will provide rental subsidies to people at risk of dying of overdoses.

Provided
Ben Ruddell, director of criminal justice policy for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

‘No great revolution’

Ruddell, the civil rights lawyer, is pushing for Illinois to pass a law to reduce low-level narcotics possession offenses from felonies to misdemeanors. Low-level narcotics possession is a felony in Illinois and 26 other states.

“This is no great revolution,” Ruddell said.

He noted that, in 2014, then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel and police Supt. Garry McCarthy told legislators they supported making possession of less than one gram of a controlled substance a misdemeanor.

Ruddell is an architect of a recent bill that would go even further, making possession of under three grams of heroin or methamphetamine and under five grams of cocaine a misdemeanor.

The bill stalled in the spring session of the Illinois Senate after winning House approval. Police associations opposed the measure. The leader of the Illinois Sheriffs’ Association said the bill wrongly reduced the penalties for what he considered to be large amounts of drugs.

And downstate lawmakers said the bill would make drug problems worse in their communities.

In Chicago, the mayor’s office and police department didn’t make any public statements about the legislation. The Cook County sheriff’s office didn’t take a position.

But the bill got support from the Cook County state’s attorney’s office and the Lake County and Champaign County sheriffs.

“People dealing with addiction need their safety net of support strengthened, not taken from them through incarceration,” Lake County Sheriff John Idleburg said in a letter to the Illinois House Judiciary Criminal Committee chairman. “Unfortunately, this is exactly what stiff criminal penalties associated with lower-level drug possession offenses do for people stuck in a destructive cycle of addiction and drug use.”

The bill isn’t dead, but it’s on a back burner, according to sources in the General Assembly.

Ruddell said the legislation would be a big step toward changing the way Chicago and other cities deal with people who use drugs.

“They’re still locking people up, and it’s still primarily Black people from low-income neighborhoods that we’re doing this to and sending them to prisons or jails,” Ruddell said. “Those are people whose employment and housing are being set back because of felony records. We need to focus on connecting people with access to services in their communities.

“Treating low-level drug possession as a felony isn’t working. It’s not reducing the use of drugs, the availability of drugs or the deadly overdoses.”

Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Lynn Boswell, a recovery coach with Thresholds, gets a hug from Elizabeth Elamri.
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Frank Main is a reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times. Casey Toner and Jared Rutecki are reporters for the Better Government Association. This story uses data from The Circuit, an Injustice Watch and BGA courts data project, in partnership with civic tech consulting firm DataMade. The University of Southern California’s Annenberg Center for Health Journalism provided financial support for the project through a 2021 National Fellowship.

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2 killed, 5 wounded by gunfire in Chicago ThursdaySun-Times Wireon December 3, 2021 at 9:21 am

Two people were killed and five others were wounded in shootings in Chicago Thursday. | Sun-Times file

The fatal attacks occurred about two hours apart.

Two people were killed and five others were wounded by gunfire in Chicago Thursday.

A 28-year-old man was fatally shot Thursday night in Roseland on the Far South Side. About 8:05 p.m., he was outside in the 300 block of West 107th Street, when he was shot in the face and chest, Chicago police said. The man was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. His name has not yet been released.
A 22-year-old man was fatally shot in a drive-by Thursday in McKinley Park on the Southwest Side. About 9:55 p.m., he was driving west on 35th Street, when someone in a passing dark-colored sedan fired shots at him in the 1700 block of West 35th Street, police said. He was struck multiple times in the head and body, and taken to Stroger Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said. His name has not yet been released.
In nonfatal attacks, two men, 33 and 60, were in the backyard of a residence about 7:05 p.m. in the 6500 block of South Albany Avenue when they were struck by gunfire, police said. The older man was struck in the abdomen, and the younger man in the back, police said. Both were taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where they were in critical condition, police said.
About half an hour later, a man, 37, was driving in the 4700 block of South Kilpatrick Avenue when someone in a dark-colored Dodge Challanger opened fire, police said. He was driven by his girlfriend to Mount Sinai, where he was in serious condition with a gunshot wound to his back, police said.
A couple of hours later, a 19-year-old woman was driving in the 5200 block of South Kedzie Avenue when someone in a dark-colored sedan opened fire, striking her in the side of the head, police said. She was taken to Christ, where she was in good condition, police said.
Earlier in the day, a man was standing on a sidewalk about 12:15 p.m. in the 8200 block of South Drexel when he suffered a gunshot wound to his ankle, police said. He was taking to Trinity Hospital in good condition, police said.

Three people were killed and seven others were wounded Wednesday in shootings across Chicago.

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2 killed, 5 wounded by gunfire in Chicago ThursdaySun-Times Wireon December 3, 2021 at 9:21 am Read More »