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Takeaways from Bears’ loss to 49ersPatrick Finleyon October 31, 2021 at 10:35 pm

Larry Borom blocks against the 49ers on Sunday. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Bears right tackle Larry Borom made his first career start.

Takeaways from the Bears’ 33-22 loss to the 49ers on Sunday:

Borom in

Rather than start Elijah Wilkinson at right tackle after he missed one game because of coronavirus protocol, the Bears turned to rookie Larry Borom for his first start one day after bringing him off injured reserve.

The fifth-round pick practiced three times last week after returning from an ankle injury suffered in Week 1.

“Just pushing myself mentally and physically to get back in that game shape,” he said. “I’ve just been trying to do a lot while I was hurt to just try and maintain what I can.”

Borom was solid in his first start, and figures to keep the spot until Germain Ifedi comes off IR.

PAT no good

Cairo Santos made three field goals to increase his field goal record to 38-straight, the longest active streak in the league. He missed a critical extra point in the fourth quarter, though — it was only his third miss in the last four years, which spans 85 extra-point tries.

Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor speculated that Santos hit his kick too high, allowing the ball to get pushed by the wind. He said he has confidence in the veteran.

“Do I think he’s still going to make kicks? He is,” he said.

TD, JJ

Tight end Jesse James’ eight-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter was his second-straight at Soldier Field. Before Sunday, his last touchdown came Dec. 6 as a member of the Lions.

He became just the second Bears tight end to catch a touchdown this year, joining Jesper Horsted.

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Takeaways from Bears’ loss to 49ersPatrick Finleyon October 31, 2021 at 10:35 pm Read More »

Over 12 shot, 2 fatally, at Halloween party in Joliet Township: ‘This could’ve been avoided’Tom Schubaon November 1, 2021 at 2:16 am

A police car sits outside a house Sunday evening where more than 12 people were wounded, two of them fatally, in a shooting early Sunday at a Halloween party in Joliet Township. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Gunfire erupted early Sunday near a DJ booth that was set up in the backyard of a home, authorities said. Witnesses reported that two gunmen opened fire “from an elevated position on a porch looking down over the crowd” of more than 200 people.

More than 12 people were wounded, two of them fatally, in a shooting early Sunday at a Halloween party in Will County, authorities said.

The shooting erupted about 12:40 a.m. near a DJ booth that was set up in the backyard of a home in the 1000 block of East Jackson Street in Joliet Township, according to a statement from the Will County sheriff’s office.

Witnesses told detectives that two gunmen opened fire “from an elevated position on a porch looking down over the crowd” of more than 200 people.

A patrol sergeant who was in the area heard as many as 12 gunshots ring out near Jackson and Walnut streets and began investigating, the sheriff’s office said. The sergeant then saw over 100 people rushing east on Jackson, and he was directed to the home.

Police officials ultimately found over a dozen people suffering from gunshot wounds in the backyard and at nearby residences, the sheriff’s office said. As authorities were investigating, additional shots were heard in the area.

Two of the victims succumbed to their wounds, while four others suffered injuries that were thought to be life-threatening, the sheriff’s office said.

Those who died hadn’t been identified by Sunday evening because their families hadn’t yet been notified.

News of the Halloween gathering had spread on social media, attracting a larger crowd than what the organizers had expected, according to Elizabeth Arias, a neighbor who said she was a relative of the people who threw the party.

Several neighbors knew something wasn’t right when they saw parked cars lined both sides of the streets in what is typically a quiet neighborhood. At least three people said they had called the police to report loud music and ask for crowd control. The party organizers also called the police, according to Arias, who spoke to them earlier in the day.

Police arrived but were “just out here waiting for them to leave,” Arias said.

“This could’ve been avoided,” said Arias, whose son and niece were at the get-together.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
Police tape blocks access to the house where more than 12 people were wounded, two of them fatally, in a shooting early Sunday at a Halloween party near the 1000 block of Jackson Street in Joliet Township.

Arias’ son told her that organizers had shut the music off and told people that the police were on their way in an attempt to get people to leave. But that didn’t happen.

Another woman who lived near the event said she heard the gunshots as she laid in bed. When she got to her porch she saw a chaotic scene of a stampede of young people running, leaving behind crushed red cups and beer cans.

“It was crazy, kids running everywhere screaming. But police were here, they were on it,” the woman said.

Arias and her neighbor took in some of the rattled partygoers who were seeking shelter.

“You could hear more shots being fired,” Arias said. People were running through a wooded area near the home, using their cellphone’s flashlights to see where they were going. Some even jumped over a fence. “It was so scary … It was something out of the movies.”

Arias said she had never seen anything like what happened Sunday morning.

“That’s why I refuse to move because it’s so quiet here,” she said.

Another woman said she had moved to the area three years ago from the West Side of Chicago to get away from gun violence.

“This is the first time” something like this happened, she said. “This is crazy.”

One of the suspected shooters was described as a Hispanic male with facial hair and a medium build who was seen wearing a red hooded sweatshirt, a black flat-billed hat and dark pants, the sheriff’s office said.

The other suspect, who donned a ski mask, was described as a male — possibly Hispanic or Black of a light complexion — with a medium build, the sheriff’s office said. He was seen wearing a yellow hooded sweatshirt.

The sheriff’s office is seeking further assistance identifying the shooters. Anyone with information, including cellphone photos or video of the party, should contact Detective Danielle Strohm at (815) 727-8574 or [email protected].

Tipsters who wish to remain anonymous can submit a tip to the sheriff’s office’s website or contact Will County Crime Stoppers at (800) 323-6734 or its website.

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Over 12 shot, 2 fatally, at Halloween party in Joliet Township: ‘This could’ve been avoided’Tom Schubaon November 1, 2021 at 2:16 am Read More »

Missing man last seen in Little Village may need medical attention: policeSun-Times Wireon November 1, 2021 at 1:07 am

Socorro Ruiz | Chicago police

Socorro Ruiz was last seen in the 2400 block of South Hamlin Avenue and he may be confused and in need of medical attention, Chicago police said.

A 76-year-old man reported missing was last seen Saturday in Little Village.

Socorro Ruiz was last seen in the 2400 block of South Hamlin Avenue and he may be confused and in need of medical attention, Chicago police said.

Ruiz was wearing a baseball cap with the work “Mexico” written in the the cap, a black beanie, a navy blue sweater and navy blue pants, police said.

He frequents the area near 31st Street and Sawyer Avenue and is often seen pushing a shopping cart and collecting scrap metal, according to police.

Anyone with information is asked to call Area Four SVU detectives at 312-746-8255.

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Missing man last seen in Little Village may need medical attention: policeSun-Times Wireon November 1, 2021 at 1:07 am Read More »

Former Second City actor plays non-binary doc on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’Darel Jevenson November 1, 2021 at 1:00 am

Dr. Kai Bartley (E.R. Fightmaster) is working on a Parkinson’s Disease cure in Minnesota on “Grey’s Anatomy.” | ABC

Dr. Kai Bartley, portrayed by E.R. Fightmaster, will be a recurring character on the ABC hit.

A former Second City performer who turned up on “Grey’s Anatomy” last month has become a recurring cast member, the first non-binary actor to play a doctor on the long-running series.

E.R. Fightmaster plays Dr. Kai Bartley, a Minnesota-based Parkinson’s Disease researcher whom Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) and Amelia (Caterina Scorsone) met last month. The character, also non-binary, hit it off with Amelia and is scheduled to return on the Nov. 11 episode.

A DePaul grad, Fightmaster starred in and co-wrote the 2018 Second City e.t.c. show “Gaslight District,” playing (among other roles) a weird stylist at a Sport Clips-style salon and an alien singing about a utopian, LGBTQ-friendly planet.

(C) Todd Rosenberg Photography
E.R. Fightmaster (center) was the Second City e.t.c. show “Gaslight District” with Sayjal Joshi (from left), Alan Linic, Andrew Knox, Jasbir Singh Vazquez and Katie Kershaw.

Fightmaster also performed with the team Baby Wine at The Annoyance and with Boom Chicago, the Amsterdam comedy theater that does Chicago-style improv for the Dutch. They appeared on the locally made Showtime series “Work in Progress” and the Hulu show “Shrill.”

Fightmaster also is half of the music duo Twin.

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Former Second City actor plays non-binary doc on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’Darel Jevenson November 1, 2021 at 1:00 am Read More »

Chicago cop facing felony charge after allegedly shooting at thieves who swiped her SUV in Evergreen ParkTom Schubaon November 1, 2021 at 1:32 am

A Chicago police sergeant is facing a felony charge after shooting at carjackers who stole her SUV Saturday nigh in suburban Evergreen Park. | Sun-Times file photo

Oneta Sampson Carney, 58, allegedly opened fire Saturday evening when a team of thieves stole her Toyota 4Runner as she and her husband were loading groceries in a Sam’s Club parking lot.

A Chicago police sergeant was hit with a felony charge after she allegedly opened fire when a team of thieves made off with her SUV Saturday evening in suburban Evergreen Park.

Oneta Sampson Carney, 58, was charged with a single count of reckless discharge of a firearm, according to a bond proffer that identifies her as an off-duty Chicago cop.

She was ordered held on $5,000 bail during her initial court hearing Sunday.

About 6:45 p.m. Saturday, Sampson Carney and her husband were loading groceries into her 2016 Toyota 4Runner in the parking lot of a Sam’s Club store at 9400 S. Western Ave., prosecutors said in the proffer. As the 4Runner sat parked and running with its hatch open, three males approached it.

Two of the suspects asked the couple if they needed help while their accomplice jumped inside the SUV and drove off, prosecutors said. The two others then ran off as Carney Sampson and her husband gave chase.

The driver then stopped as one of his accomplices ran toward the SUV, prosecutors said. That’s when Sampson Carney allegedly fired a single shot using a 9mm handgun that struck the ground behind the SUV as it took off.

At the time, children and other people were present in the parking lot and another vehicle was driving down the same aisle, prosecutors said.

The thieves “made good on their escape,” prosecutors said, and none of them displayed a weapon or made any threats to Sampson Carney or her husband. The incident was caught on video surveillance.

Sampson Carney called 911 to report the theft but didn’t report that she’d discharged her weapon until officers arrived at the scene, prosecutors said. Officers then recovered a shell casing and Sampson Carney’s gun, which was one round short of being fully loaded.

The crime news blog CWB Chicago first reported that Sampson Carney had been charged. The outlet also reported that her private attorney announced in court that her client is a 19-year veteran of the police force who currently serves as a sergeant.

Her full name listed in the proffer doesn’t appear in city records, but a sergeant named Oneta Sampson does, earning an annual salary of $118,998.

A police spokesperson said it was unclear whether the department had been informed of the arrest and didn’t respond to questions about the differing names.

Sampson Carney and her attorney, Donna Dowd, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Investigators believe the stolen SUV was later recovered Saturday night in the Loop, a Chicago police source said.

Chicago police previously reported that officers observed a white Toyota 4Runner that matched the description of a vehicle that was hijacked in Evergreen Park. The 4Runner ultimately came to a stop about 8:35 p.m. after rear-ending another vehicle in the 200 block of West Wacker Drive. Six suspects, including a 26-year-old man and five juveniles, were then taken into custody after attempting to flee.

In a statement, Evergreen Park police said multiple suspects, including several juveniles, were arrested by Chicago police in connection to the earlier incident in the southwest suburb but didn’t provide any other details.

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Chicago cop facing felony charge after allegedly shooting at thieves who swiped her SUV in Evergreen ParkTom Schubaon November 1, 2021 at 1:32 am Read More »

From Matt Nagy’s secret bunker, the real story of the Bears’ loss to the 49ers!Rick Morrisseyon October 31, 2021 at 10:22 pm

Chris Tabor, filling in for head coach Matt Nagy, talks with an official during the Bears’ loss to the 49ers on Sunday. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

In which the head coach reveals what’s what about Chris Tabor, the guy who filled in for him Sunday.

This is Matt Nagy reporting to you from an undisclosed location. My Bears — my Bears, OK? — just lost 33-22 to the 49ers. Because of COVID-19 protocols, I was not allowed to coach the guys today. As many of you already know, I have chosen to keep my whereabouts a secret. The reason for my whereabouts being a secret is also a secret.

All I can do is promise you that the decision to go underground is “real” and that the “why” of it eventually will come out.

I might be somewhere far away — or am I? — but I hear what people are saying: The Bears’ offense sure looked better with special teams coordinator Chris Tabor filling in as head coach! Allow me to let all you geniuses in on a little secret: You think Tabor invented the use of tight ends? You think Tabor had an epiphany to call set run plays for quarterback Justin Fields?

If I tell Tabor I need a cup of coffee, I don’t need to tell him about the cream and sugar. It’s his job to know. I’m up here on the organizational chart. He’s down there — I’m pointing to my knee, but you can’t see that. If you could, we’d have a security breach.

You people are forgetting that I helped design the game plan during the week, and you’re clearly dismissing the possibility that all the good plays were my doing, which, by the way, they were. And let me throw in a third thing: Ever heard of Harry Potter’s Cloak of Invisibility? Can you say with 100% certainty that an unseeable me wasn’t whispering in Tabor’s ear on the sidelines? No, you can’t.

The easiest thing in life is to take the most obvious route. It’s why in the first seven games of the season I didn’t take advantage of Fields’ amazing ability to run with the ball. In other words, I knew that opponents knew what I was going to do, so why would I do that, even if it were the most prudent path?

Sometimes I just shake my head and say to myself, “I love Being You, Matt!”

But I am willing to adapt. So that wild touchdown run by Fields in the fourth quarter today, that 22-yard, crazy-legged, defender-abusing thing of beauty on fourth and 1?

All my idea.

That’s right. We had a team meeting earlier in the week, and even though I couldn’t take part in person because of COVID, I could tell via Zoom that the guys were getting even closer to each other than they were before, which I didn’t think was possible. Camaraderie was through the roof. Anyway, I distinctly remember saying, “Let’s run that play where Justin, under extreme pressure, somehow avoids everybody on the other team on his way to the end zone.” There was no response to my suggestion on the Zoom meeting, just lots of blank looks from players and coaches. I banged my headphones on the desk and yelled, “Are these things working?” Nothing.

But the proof is in the results, folks. Fields rushed for 103 yards and that touchdown today. He threw for another. The offense was eight for 15 on third-down attempts. And we — yes, we — scored on five of our first six possessions.

Some of you are saying that this game was a referendum on my abilities as a coach and that a decent effort by the offense against an injury riddled San Francisco defense means I should be canned. OK, I’ll play your game. Tabor should be named head coach because Fields threw for a measly 175 yards? If he throws for 175 yards when I’m coaching, the city wants to run me out of town!

What’s that? Some of you think Tabor resembled a veteran head coach on the sidelines? Who do you think taught him to look so assertive while going for it on fourth down? That’s my firm jaw! That’s my steely stare! I’m 30,000 feet over Nebraska, holding the briefcase with the nuclear codes, and this bozo is stealing Matt Nagy!

“I was extremely comfortable,” Tabor said in his postgame press conference. “At the end of the day, we’re football coaches and leading men to do something and get something accomplished.”

Yeah, you’re a little too comfortable, buddy. Start cleaning out your desk. It’s probably filled with kicking tees anyway.

Wide receiver Darnell Mooney said Tabor was “energizing” on the sidelines, and even though I’m taking his quote completely out of context, Mooney is gone, too!

Fields told reporters that a text I sent him before the game was “inspirational.” All that does is play into the perception of me as the cheerleader-in-chief. I ceded the play-calling duties to offensive coordinator Bill Lazor a few weeks ago, and no matter how much I try to tell people that the offense is mine, that I’m its creator, it seems to go in one helmet ear hole and out the other.

It’s clear to me that I have a lot of work to do in the swaying of public opinion. I’m not who people think I am. Or where they think I am. Wherever that is.

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From Matt Nagy’s secret bunker, the real story of the Bears’ loss to the 49ers!Rick Morrisseyon October 31, 2021 at 10:22 pm Read More »

Bears lose critical game to 49ers but might have found their playmakerPatrick Finleyon October 31, 2021 at 8:06 pm

Justin Fields throws against the 49ers on Sunday. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Justin Fields finally became what Bears fans had dreamed him to be, looking at times like the fastest and most gifted player on the field Sunday.

The Bears walked onto the field Sunday without coach Matt Nagy and outside linebacker Khalil Mack. They left it with a playmaker.

Rookie quarterback Justin Fields was in one moment efficient and another breathtaking, leading the Bears in rushing and awe-inspiring moments. That might not take the sting out of a 33-22 loss to the 49ers, a game the Bears had to have to discuss the playoffs with a straight face. Halfway through the season, they’re 3-5 and in the middle of a three-game losing streak.

The second half of the year, then, will be all about the development of Fields. Sunday, he gave the Bears more to dream on than at any point this season. Fields went 19-for-27 for 175 yards and a touchdown — an eight-yard laser to a diving Jesse James while sprinting left.

His 84.6 passer rating was almost 20 points higher before he threw his only interception down 11 with just less than two minutes to play. Because he converted 6-of-8 third downs in the first half, the Bears didn’t punt until the two-minute mark of the third quarter.

He ran 10 times for 103 yards, the most for a Bears quarterback in one game since Bobby Douglass had 100 in 1973. Stats don’t do Fields justice, though. His 22-yard touchdown run with 9:32 to play and the Bears down seven will be replayed on the Soldier Field scoreboard — and maybe even the one in Arlington Heights — for a decade.

Acting head coach Chris Tabor — filling in for Matt Nagy, who has the coronavirus — decided to go for it on fourth-and-1 from the 49ers’ 22. Fields took the snap from under center and rolled right, looking to dump the ball quickly in the flat to running back Khalil Herbert. The 49ers’ were blitzing from that side, though, and defensive end Arik Armstead was waiting for Fields.

Fields hit the brakes, though, and slipped underneath the diving defender. Still seven yards short of the first-down marker, Fields planted his right foot on the right hash and cut left past another diving defender. He ran parallel to the line of scrimmage and turned upfield once he reached the numbers.

“I just saw the lanes open up …” he said. “It was just on instinct.”

Left tackle Jason Peters’ backside block gave him room to run up the sideline and, finally, past the first-down marker. Darnell Mooney’s block of Josh Norman at the 15 allowed Fields to duck back inside and run, untouched, for the 22-yard touchdown. It was the longest run of his career.

“He was going back to pee-wee days on that one,” receiver Darnell Mooney said.

Fields, whom the Bears have praised as playing even-keeled in good times and bad, knew in the moment that what he’d done was extraordinary.

“I’m not gonna lie, that was awesome,” Fields said.

In explaining the play, Tabor hit on precisely what could make Fields special — he has the ability to erase the Bears’ many flaws with his own athleticism.

“He made nothing into something, and got us going there,” he said.

Fields flashed excitement all game long. On the first drive of the second half, Fields faced third-and-18 from the 49ers’ 14. He rolled left, stepped over a diving lunge from Nick Bosa and seemed trapped in by all-pro linebacker Fred Warner, who was rushing from the left.

Fields performed a pirouette back toward the middle of the field, escaping for a five-yard gain before running out of bounds. A defensive hold on the play gave the Bears a first down, though they had to settle for a field goal.

“Although it wasn’t a crazy gain, it just says, or it tells the defense that, ‘Man, you’ve got to really work on tackling this guy,'” defensive tackle Akiem Hicks said. “Maybe he slows them down a little bit, so it gives you other options.”

Just as Fields got better, though, the Bears defense got worse. The usually-stead unit allowed the 49ers to score on the final seven possessions of the game, not counting the kneeldown. After Fields’ touchdown run, Cairo Santos missed the extra point, leaving the Bears down one with 9:32 to play. Rolling Meadows High School alum Jimmy Garpollo needed five plays — four of which were first downs — to march the 49ers 75 yards. The quarterback scored on a five-yard run to go up eight.

On the ensuing drive, Fields took an unconscionable sack on third-and-10 from the Bears’ 40, force the Bears to punt. The 49ers bled two-and-a-half minutes off the clock and kicked a field goal to seal the game.

For maybe the first time all year, though, Fields’ exhilarating plays outnumbered the rookie mistakes.

“I’m not a quarterback analyst,” Hicks said. “But I will say this: He’s elite. Like, it’s fun to watch. Right?”

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Bears lose critical game to 49ers but might have found their playmakerPatrick Finleyon October 31, 2021 at 8:06 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: Justin Fields leads team in rushing despite lossVincent Pariseon October 31, 2021 at 10:11 pm

The Chicago Bears lost once again. They are not a good football team and they are also dealing with some significant injuries. They were defeated on Sunday by the San Francisco 49ers in a game where they fell 33-22. It was a disaster performance by the team as a whole but they saw some big-time […] Chicago Bears: Justin Fields leads team in rushing despite loss – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bears: Justin Fields leads team in rushing despite lossVincent Pariseon October 31, 2021 at 10:11 pm Read More »

Chicago cop facing felony charge after allegedly shooting at carjackers in Evergreen ParkTom Schubaon October 31, 2021 at 9:12 pm

A Chicago police sergeant is facing a felony charge after shooting at carjackers who stole her SUV Saturday nigh in suburban Evergreen Park. | Sun-Times file photo

Oneta Sampson Carney, 58, allegedly opened fire Saturday evening when a team of carjackers swiped her Toyota 4Runner as she and her husband were loading groceries in a Sam’s Club parking lot.

A Chicago police sergeant was hit with a felony charge after she allegedly opened fire when a team of carjackers made off with her SUV Saturday evening in suburban Evergreen Park.

Oneta Sampson Carney, 58, was charged with a single count of reckless discharge of a firearm, according to a bond proffer that identifies her as an off-duty Chicago cop.

She was ordered held on $5,000 bail during her initial court hearing Sunday.

About 6:45 p.m. Saturday, Sampson Carney and her husband were loading groceries into her 2016 Toyota 4Runner in the parking lot of a Sam’s Club store at 9400 S. Western Ave., prosecutors said in the proffer. As the 4Runner sat parked with its hatch open, three males approached it.

Two of the suspects asked the couple if they needed help while their accomplice jumped inside the SUV and drove off, prosecutors said. The two others then ran off as Carney Sampson and her husband gave chase.

The driver then stopped as one of his accomplices ran toward the SUV, prosecutors said. That’s when Sampson Carney allegedly fired a single shot using a 9mm handgun that struck the ground behind the SUV as it took off.

At the time, children and other people were present in the parking lot and another vehicle was driving down the same aisle, prosecutors said.

The carjackers “made good on their escape,” prosecutors said, and none of them displayed a weapon or made any threats to Sampson Carney or her husband. The incident was caught on video surveillance.

Sampson Carney called 911 to report the carjacking but didn’t report that she’d discharged her weapon until officers arrived at the scene, prosecutors said. Officers then recovered a shell casing and Sampson Carney’s gun, which was one round short of being fully loaded.

A spokesman for Evergreen Park police didn’t immediately respond to questions from the Sun-Times.

The crime news blog CWB Chicago first reported that Sampson Carney had been charged. The outlet reported that her private attorney announced in court that her client is a 19-year veteran of the police force who currently serves as a sergeant.

Her full name listed in the proffer doesn’t appear in city records, but a sergeant named Oneta Sampson does, earning an annual salary of $118,998.

A police spokesperson said it was unclear whether the department had been informed of the arrest and didn’t respond to questions about the differing names.

Sampson and her attorney, Donna Dowd, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Investigators believe the stolen SUV was later recovered Saturday night in the Loop, a Chicago police source said.

In that incident, officers observed a white Toyota 4Runner that matched the description of a vehicle that was hijacked in Evergreen Park. The 4Runner ultimately came to a stop after rear-ending another vehicle in the 200 block of West Wacker Drive, Chicago police previously reported.

Six suspects, including a 26-year-old man and five juveniles, were then taken into custody after attempting to flee, police said.

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Chicago cop facing felony charge after allegedly shooting at carjackers in Evergreen ParkTom Schubaon October 31, 2021 at 9:12 pm Read More »

G-20 make mild pledges on climate neutrality, coal financingAssociated Presson October 31, 2021 at 8:31 pm

World leaders made a compromise commitment Sunday to reach carbon neutrality “by or around mid-century” as they wrapped up a two-day summit that was laying the groundwork for the U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland. | AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

The U.K. is hosting the two-week Glasgow conference and had looked for more ambitious targets to come out of Rome.

ROME — Leaders of the world’s biggest economies agreed Sunday to stop funding coal-fired power plants in poor countries and made a vague commitment to seek carbon neutrality “by or around mid-century” as they wrapped up a Rome summit before the much larger United Nations climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland.

While Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and French President Emmanuel Macron described the Group of 20 summit as a success, the outcome disappointed climate activists, the chief of the U.N. and Britain’s leader. The U.K. is hosting the two-week Glasgow conference and had looked for more ambitious targets to come out of Rome.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the G-20’s commitments mere “drops in a rapidly warming ocean.” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres agreed the outcome was not enough.

“While I welcome the #G20’s recommitment to global solutions, I leave Rome with my hopes unfulfilled — but at least they are not buried,” Guterres tweeted. “Onwards to #COP26 in Glasgow.”

The G-20 countries represent more than three-quarters of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, and Britain had hoped for a “G-20 bounce” going into the Glasgow COP26 meeting. Environmentalists and scientists have described the U.N. conference as the world’s “last best hope” for nailing down commitments to limit the global rise in temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above the pre-industrial average.

The summit laid bare the divisions that still exist between Western countries that polluted the planet the most historically but are now seeing emissions decline and the emerging economies led by China whose emissions are rising as their economies grow.

Britain pushed for a commitment to achieve climate neutrality or net-zero emissions, meaning a balance between greenhouse gases added to and removed from the atmosphere, by 2050.

The United States and the European Union have set 2050 as their own deadline for reaching net-zero emissions, while China, Russia and Saudi Arabia are aiming for 2060. The leaders of those three countries didn’t come to Rome for the summit.

In the end, the G-20 leaders arrived at a compromise to achieve climate neutrality “by or around mid-century,” not a set year.

Before leaving Rome, U.S. President Joe Biden called it “disappointing’ that G-20 members Russia and China ‘basically didn’t show up” with commitments to address the scourge of climate change ahead of the U.N. climate conference.

Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping are not expected to attend the conference in Glasgow, although they are sending senior officials to the international COP26 talks.

“The disappointment relates to the fact that Russia…and China basically didn’t show up in terms of any commitments to deal with climate change. And there’s a reason why people should be disappointed,” Biden said, adding: “I found it disappointing myself.”

Biden comments came in response to a reporter’s question about the modest pledges made during the G-20 summit.

“We made commitments here from across the board in terms of what we’re going to bring to (COP26),” the president said. “As that old trade saying goes, the proof of the pudding will be in the eating.”

Earlier in the day, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pushed back at the West’s target date.

“Why do you believe 2050 is some magic figure?” Lavrov asked at a news conference. “If it is an ambition of the European Union, it is the right of other countries also to have ambitions….No one has proven to us or anybody else that 2050 is something everyone must subscribe to.”

Italy’s Draghi said the declaration went further on climate than any G-20 statement before it. He noted that it referred to keeping the 1.5-degree global warming target within reach, something that science shows will be hard to accomplish unless the world dramatically cuts emissions from fossil fuels.

“We changed the goalposts,” Draghi told reporters.

Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau said that G-20 leaders were able to get together was in itself a success given the coronavirus pandemic.

“The fact that we have well laid out the table and know where the sharp edges are, and know what work we we’re going to have to do at COP… is a very positive step,” Trudeau said.

The future of coal, a key source of greenhouse gas emissions, also proved one of the most difficult issues on which to find consensus for the G-20.

At the Rome summit, leaders agreed to “put an end to the provision of international public finance for new unabated coal power generation abroad by the end of 2021.” That refers to financial support for building coal plants abroad.

Western countries have been moving away from such financing and major Asian economies are following suit: Chinese President Xi Jinping announced at the U.N. General Assembly last month that Beijing would stop funding such projects, and Japan and South Korea made similar commitments earlier in the year.

China has not set an end date for building coal plants at home, however. Coal is still China’s main source of power generation, and both China and India have resisted proposals for a G-20 declaration on phasing out domestic coal consumption.

The failure of the G-20 to set a target for phasing out domestic coal use was a disappointment to Britain. But Johnson’s spokesperson, Max Blain, said the G-20 communique “was never meant to be the main lever in order to secure commitments on climate change,” noting those would be hammered out at the Glasgow summit.

John Kirton, director of the G-20 Research Group at the University of Toronto, said the leaders “took only baby steps” in the agreement and did almost nothing new.

He pointed to the agreement to “recall and reaffirm” their overdue commitment to provide $100 billion in assistance to poorer countries and to “stress the importance of meeting that goal fully as soon as possible” instead of stating that they were ready to stump up the full amount.

The agreement to end international coal financing “is the one thing that’s specific and real. That one counts,” Kirton said.

Youth climate activists Greta Thunberg and Vanessa Nakate issued an open letter to the media as the G-20 was wrapping up, stressing three fundamental aspects of the climate crisis that often are downplayed: that time is running out, that any solution must provide justice to the people most affected, and that the biggest polluters often hide behind incomplete statistics about their true emissions.

“The climate crisis is only going to become more urgent. We can still avoid the worst consequences, we can still turn this around. But not if we continue like today,” they wrote, just weeks after Thunberg shamed global leaders for their “blah blah blah” rhetoric during a youth climate summit in Milan.

Greenpeace Executive Director Jennifer Morgan said the G-20 failed to provide the leadership the world needed. “I think it was a betrayal to young people around the world,” she told The Associated Press on Sunday.

Aside from climate issues, the leaders signed off on a landmark agreement for countries to enact a global minimum corporate tax of 15%. The global minimum is aimed at deterring multinational companies from dodging taxes by shifting profits to countries with ultra-low rates where they may do little actual business.

The leaders also said they would continue work on a French initiative for wealthier countries to re-channel $100 billion in financial support to needier countries in Africa in the form of special drawing rights – a foreign exchange tool used to help finance imports allocated by the International Monetary Fund and also received by advanced countries.

The leaders said they were “working on actionable options” to do that and set the $100 billion figure as a “total global ambition” short of an absolute commitment. Some $45 billion has already been reallocated by individual countries on a voluntary basis.

The commitment reflects concern that the post-pandemic recovery is diverging, with wealthy countries rebounding faster due to extensive vaccinations and stimulus spending.

___ Associated Press writers Jill Lawless and Sylvie Corbet contributed to this report. Aamer Madhani contributed from Washington.

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