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Cubs moving forward with new front office finally in placeRussell Dorseyon November 11, 2021 at 2:51 am

“I want to create a culture of winning and inclusion. I also want us to be excellent decision makers, and excellent developer players,” Jed Hoyer said Wednesday.

CARLSBAD, Calif. — It’s been nearly a year since Jed Hoyer took over for his predecessor Theo Epstein as Cubs president of Baseball Operations and since, he’s started to make the team’s front office his own.

After years of stagnation in player development specifically at the major-league level, the Cubs’ changes in their front office have been in an attempt to resolve that as they build their next contending team.

Carter Hawkins, who was named general manager last month, has a background in player development from his time in Cleveland. The team also hired Ehsan Bokhari from the Astros replacing Randy Bush as the team’s newest assistant general manager.

Now that their front office hirings have stabilized, Hoyer has expectations for how he wants to lead his new group.

“I think that it’s our job to create a culture for the organization,” Hoyer told the Sun-Times. “Like that’s really important. So I want to create a culture of winning and inclusion. I also want us to be excellent decision makers, and excellent developer players.

“When I think about what our job is in the simplest form, we need to make really good decisions and we need to make players better.”

Hawkins is still getting adjusted to life with the Cubs as GM, but he also has high hopes of putting his stamp on the organization. That impact won’t be felt overnight, but he has goals adding to the team’s desire to grow as a front office is a priority.

“Winning is the ultimate goal. But what are the attributes that are actually pushing towards that?,” Hawkins said on Wednesday “The Cubs are doing great work. They existed without me for a full year. Without a GM for a full year. So my hope is that I’m additive to the process and additive to getting towards that ultimate vision of bringing back champion baseball to Chicago.”

When you look at the Cubs hires over the last few months, the desire to look outside of the organization to improve is apparent including hires like new hitting coach Greg Brown from the Rays.

The Cubs will now attempt to take their new and fresh ideas and combine it with their resources as they try to improve the roster this offseason. As they try to improve the roster on the field, having different perspectives from different organizations off the field should help that process.

“I mentioned a little bit about bringing people together and bringing some of the resources together and thinking through some of the structures that can do that from some of my experiences,” Hawkins added. “Thinking about how to hire and develop people in a really effective way, sort of bringing people on currently and will bring on people in the future.

“I think those are probably two areas that I would hope to look back a year from now and say, ‘Hey, I helped out in those two areas. But again, the guys and girls that were doing that beforehand are doing a pretty darn good job of it. So really, I’m here just to enhance a little bit of the BASF, “Not just making your products, making your product better.”

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Cubs moving forward with new front office finally in placeRussell Dorseyon November 11, 2021 at 2:51 am Read More »

CPD sergeant should be fired over botched Anjanette Young raid, top cop says; other officers also face disciplineMitch Dudekon November 11, 2021 at 2:18 am

Anjanette Young was a victim of a botched raid by the Chicago Police Department in 2019. | Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file

The move came just a day before the Civilian Office of Police Accountability publicly released its final report on the botched raid that recommended a handful of police officers face discipline for their roles that night.

Chicago Police Supt. David Brown wants to fire the sergeant who oversaw a raid on the wrong home that resulted in social worker Anjanette Young being handcuffed while she was naked.

The move came just a day before the Civilian Office of Police Accountability publicly released its final report on the botched raid that recommended a handful of police officers face discipline, such as suspensions and possible terminations, for their roles that night.

According to documents filed by Brown earlier this week with the Chicago Police Board, Sgt. Alex Wolinski allowed Young — who was undressed and getting ready for bed when police burst into her home in 2019 looking for a man with a gun — to remain in handcuffs and naked for 40 minutes in a room full of male police officers. She remained in the position even after it had been established officers were at the wrong home.

One specific rule Wolinski is accused of violating forbids “disrespect to or maltreatment of any person.” Wolinski is scheduled to appear at a Dec. 3 virtual hearing before the board, which will ultimately decide his fate.

The COPA report, which was sent to Brown in April, had recommended Wolinski and Sgt. Cory Petracco receive penalties ranging from suspensions of at least a year to termination. Officer Alan Aporongao, who obtained the search warrant, should face a punishment ranging from six months to separation from CPD, the report said.

COPA officials said Wolinski’s case was likely brought by Brown before the Police Board first because of his rank, but said other officers involved have already been served with administrative charges. Those cases will likely be sent to the board in the near future, officials said. Officers facing less than a year of suspension do not need to appear before the board.

Young’s mistreatment began with Aporongao’s misconduct in obtaining the warrant and supervisors who failed to provide proper oversight, the report stated.

The agency determined Young’s experiences reveal more pervasive problems within the department — larger than any individual incident of officer misconduct.

“The intrusion against her person and the invasion of her home implicate other concerns, including lack of adequate training and supervision surrounding the Department’s use of search warrants and the disproportionate impact of police actions on people of color,” the report read.

Police officials didn’t respond to requests to comment Wednesday.

The head of the police union that represents sergeants couldn’t be reached for comment.

To bolster his position that Wolinski should be terminated, Brown also pointed out that Wolinski didn’t adhere to the police department’s knock-and-announce rule before entering Young’s Near West Side home; failed to intervene to stop the disrespectful treatment of Young; and failed to promptly present a search warrant, a task that took 15 minutes.

Wolinski also ignored requests from an officer at the scene to remove Young’s handcuffs and broke with department policy by failing to notify a SWAT supervisor before entering the home, according to the documents.

A sobbing Young can be seen on the bodycam video telling officers more than 40 times that they had the wrong house; eventually, one officer finally gave her a blanket to cover up.

An unnamed informant gave police Young’s address, saying a man was illegally possessing a gun there. But when officers arrived, they found only Young, who repeatedly told the officers that she lived alone.

John Catanzara, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, which represents rank-and-file officers, called Brown’s decision a “disgusting display of ‘leadership” on a Facebook post Wednesday. He didn’t respond to followup requests about the COPA report.

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CPD sergeant should be fired over botched Anjanette Young raid, top cop says; other officers also face disciplineMitch Dudekon November 11, 2021 at 2:18 am Read More »

Violent death of Chinese student in Hyde Park sparks calls for action — but few specifics on how to combat city’s rising crimeDavid Struetton November 11, 2021 at 2:14 am

U. of C. staff members, students and friends of Zheng — many of them holding bouquets of flowers — stopped by a memorial in the 1000 block of East 54th street Wednesday evening. | Madeline Kenney/Sun-Times

Shaoxiong Zheng, 24, was gunned down during an armed robbery just north of the University of Chicago campus

Shaoxiong “Dennis” Zheng hadn’t been in Chicago long, but his murder on a street in Hyde Park has resonated across a city facing its second straight year of rising violence.

The University of Chicago, where the “bright and talented” Zheng recently got his master’s in statistics, called on the mayor and police superintendent to treat violence as a “public health crisis.”

Members of the City Council from the Hyde Park area said a state of emergency exists and a summit needs to be held to figure out “how we triage neighborhoods.”

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, who lives in Hyde Park, asked, “When is enough, enough?” and called for “an immediate and urgent response to the violence.”

By the end of the day, Mayor Lori Lightfoot — who beat Preckwinkle for the office — promised to meet with police brass and community leaders “to determine concrete, tangible measures [that] can be taken to prevent tragedies such as these in the future.”

University of Chicago website
Shaoxiong “Dennis” Zheng

No one offered details, though the university said “we will share specifics soon” after further talks with City Hall and others.

Lightfoot and police Supt. David Brown have regularly announced stepped-up efforts against crime.

In October, Brown unveiled a tip line that offers cash rewards in homicide and gun trafficking cases. Brown also increased patrols in River North following an uptick in crime. Lightfoot’s 2022 budget promises to boost funding for an array of violence prevention programs.

But the violence has stubbornly stayed high.

There have been at least 698 homicides this year compared to 680 this time last year. At this point in 2019, the city had seen just 442 homicides.

At least 3,909 people have been shot this year, an increase of almost 9% compared to the same point in 2020 and 69% compared to 2019.

In Hyde Park, there were no murders by this time last year but there have been five this year, according to police to police statistics.

Shootings in Hyde Park have more than tripled this year to 16, but that’s still low compared to Woodlawn, the community area to the south. Woodlawn has seen 83 shootings so far this year, an increase of 150% compared to the same time in 2019. It’s also seen 13 homicides this year, up from 8 in 2020 and 9 in 2019.

“The five murders in Hyde Park this year are shocking and demand action, but we also must not lose sight of the fact that there are many other neighborhoods in the city that year after year suffer many more homicides and shootings — and that too should be shocking,” said Roseanna Ander, executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab and Education Lab.

“I do hope that the tragedies and the loss of life in Hyde Park help to galvanize an unprecedented effort and a commitment to finding solutions not only in Hyde Park but in every corner of our city,” she added.

‘Promising scholar’

Police say Zheng was on the sidewalk in the 900 block of East 54th Street when a dark-colored car pulled up and a gunman got out shortly before 2 p.m. Tuesday.

Witnesses told officers he appeared to struggle with the robber and a shot went off. Zheng was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center down the street, where he was pronounced dead.

Police said the robber got back in the car and fled west on 54th Place. No arrests have been made.

About two hours earlier, just blocks away, businesses and cars were damaged by shots fired from a Hyundai Sonata at 53rd Street and South Harper Avenue, police said. No injuries were reported, but several cars and two businesses were damaged.

Zheng had graduated from the University of Hong Kong in 2019 and got his master’s in statistics at the University of Chicago this past summer.

“He was motivated, independent, and intellectually curious,” said Mei Wang, director of the statistics master’s program. “He aspired to be a data scientist who could solve important problems facing our society, and who could help people to help more people.”

Professor Dan Nicolae said Zheng “was not only a promising scholar but also a wonderful person, always willing to help other students. He will be missed by all who knew him.”

Xi Cheng, who knew Zheng for six months, remembered him as a “really positive, nice person.” The two became friends after they connected on WeChat, a Chinese instant message and social media app, and donated clothes to Goodwill.

“I can feel he loves Chicago so much,” Cheng said. “I can feel he really enjoyed here and loves this [city] so it’s really tragic to hear.”

Cheng, 22, choked up as she recalled Zheng and his love for sports, especially table tennis, and photography. “May he rest in peace.”

U. of C. staff members, students and friends of Zheng — many of them holding bouquets of flowers — stopped by a memorial in the 1000 block of East 54th street Wednesday evening.

Some lit candles that flickered in the night breeze, others wrote messages to Zheng on white poster boards held down with rocks. One poster read, “Stop gun violence.”

Two university staff members, who did not want to be named, stuck signs in the ground that read, “Justice for innocent” and “Innocent cannot die in vain!”

“We feel this is really, really probably the worst year for U of Chicago,” one of the women said, noting three students have been gunned down in the last year. “We feel we have to do something, you just cannot let it go on forever.”

‘This is a crisis’

In a statement released Wednesday evening, Lightfoot said detectives were “hard at work on the case and are pursuing a number of leads.” She didn’t say what they were or if an arrest was imminent.

Lightfoot said she had “several detailed discussions” with the U. of C. president Paul Alivisatos. While they work out longer-range plans, the mayor said patrols by campus police and Chicago police will be increased on the campus and around Hyde Park.

“In the longer term, the city will continue engaging local community members, aldermen, and other involved stakeholders to gather feedback and recommendations on enhancing other public safety measures throughout the Hyde Park and Kenwood communities,” Lightfoot said.

Neither she nor Alivisatos would say what those measures might be, though the school president said they will include “working with our neighbors [and] calling on our university community’s academic and policy expertise.”

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times
Leslie Harston, 5th Ward Alderwoman, along with community members and other elected officials, speaks to reporters at the corner of 53rd Street and Harper Ave, during a press conference over recent violence in the Hyde Park neighborhood, Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021.

Ald. Sophia King (4th) and Ald. Leslie Hairston (5th) said a summit on Chicago violence needs to be held as soon as possible.

“There needs to be a place where we are at the table with the governor, where we are at the table with the mayor, where we are at the table with the county, where we are at the table with the city,” Hairston said. “It needs to take place quick, fast and in a hurry.

“This is a state of an emergency and this is a crisis,” she added.

Preckwinkle made a similar call. But like the council members and the mayor, she mentioned no specific measures to reduce the city’s chronic violence.

“We need an immediate and urgent response to the violence as well as a long-term plan to address those root causes of violence,” she said, promising to reach out “to relevant stakeholders to bring everyone together and establish real world results.”

Contributing: Emmanuel Camarillo, Cindy Hernandez, Andy Boyle

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Violent death of Chinese student in Hyde Park sparks calls for action — but few specifics on how to combat city’s rising crimeDavid Struetton November 11, 2021 at 2:14 am Read More »

Review: Familiar (Steppenwolf Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon November 29, 2018 at 7:34 pm

Danai Gurira’s Familiar is all about ritual: the Zimbabwean pre-marriage exchange between the groom and the bride’s family, the TV football game that leaves them cheering, the traditional musical instrument Nyasha brings home. Even a snowstorm feels sacred in the world of Familiar. This memorable play is a must-see, a testament to the power of family in all its complex, grounded glory. Highly Recommended. (review by Lauren Emily Whalen)Read More

Review: Familiar (Steppenwolf Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon November 29, 2018 at 7:34 pm Read More »

Review: The Nutcracker (Joffrey Ballet, 2018)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 6, 2018 at 10:23 pm

This Nutcracker, now in its third year with Joffrey Ballet, remains the same in terms of dreamy scenery, candy-colored costumes, Tchaikovsky’s iconic score and the warm glow of love. Two years after its world premiere, the Joffrey Nutcracker is still an emotional journey, full of surprises and delights around every corner, and the enduring power of innocence. Highly Recommended! (review by Lauren Emily Whalen)Read More

Review: The Nutcracker (Joffrey Ballet, 2018)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 6, 2018 at 10:23 pm Read More »

Review: La Ruta (Steppenwolf Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 29, 2018 at 9:49 pm

Isaac Gomez’s full-length play La Ruta has its stunning world premiere at Steppenwolf Theatre Company. Directed by ensemble member Sandra Marquez and featuring a powerhouse female ensemble, La Ruta is both devastating and glorious in a way that’s difficult to convey in words. Highly Recommended. (review by Lauren Emily Whalen)Read More

Review: La Ruta (Steppenwolf Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 29, 2018 at 9:49 pm Read More »

Review: Into the Woods (Music Theater Works)John Olsonon December 28, 2018 at 11:36 pm

Music Theater Works’ two-weekend, eight-performance run is one of those rare opportunities to see this Sondheim musical performed by a cast that can deliver the goods on both Sondheim’s demanding and beautiful score along with the comedy baked into his lyrics and James Lapine’s script. Director Rudy Hogenmiller has assembled an all-star cast of Chicago non-Equity players (alongside two Equity members) to provide a fully-satisfying production of this classic that can hold its own against memories of the original Broadway production. Highly Recommended! (review by John Olson)Read More

Review: Into the Woods (Music Theater Works)John Olsonon December 28, 2018 at 11:36 pm Read More »

Review: The Winter Wolf (Otherworld Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 18, 2018 at 10:47 pm

Otherworld Theatre is a relatively new Chicago company, focusing on science fiction and fantasy-focused storytelling. The Winter Wolf is their holiday world premiere, an intimate female-driven fairy tale about granddaughters, grandfathers and the quest to keep Christmas wonderful. Recommended. (review by Lauren Emily Whalen)Read More

Review: The Winter Wolf (Otherworld Theatre)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 18, 2018 at 10:47 pm Read More »

Review: Yippee Ki-Yay Merry Christmas! A Die Hard Musical Parody (Yippee Productions)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 12, 2018 at 11:11 pm

With the annual holiday ritual of this Die Hard musical parody, writing team Michael Shepherd Joran, Alex Garday and Stephanie McCullough make the show a grab bag of 80’s references, some of which are clearly missed by the show’s millennial target audience. Solid parody is more difficult than it seems, and Yippee Ki-Yay’s mediocre book and score, coupled with wishy-washy direction and a struggling lead actor, show that just because you can, doesn’t mean you should. (review by Lauren Emily Whalen)Read More

Review: Yippee Ki-Yay Merry Christmas! A Die Hard Musical Parody (Yippee Productions)Lauren Emily Whalenon December 12, 2018 at 11:11 pm Read More »