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Man arrested after setting vehicle on fire; nearly driving into security guard, in the LoopSun-Times Wireon August 18, 2021 at 10:31 am
A man was taken into custody after he nearly drove into a security guard, then set a vehicle on fire Tuesday in the Loop.
About 10:55 p.m., the man, believed to be about 20-years-old, was trying to exit a parking garage in the 100 block of North State Street, in a black Cadillac SUV, and told the onsite security officer that he did not have any money to pay for the parking ticket, Chicago police said.
The officer stepped in front of the vehicle in order to manually life the gate, and the man sped through with his vehicle, nearing hitting the officer, police said. The officer sustained minor injuries and refused treatment.
The man then drove the SUV to State Street, where he set the SUV on fire, and fled on foot, police said. He was found by police on the CTA Red Line platform and taken into custody, police said. The man was taken to a hospital for an evaluation.
Charges are pending.
‘Flag Day’: Sean Penn, daughter Dylan mesmerize as father and child at oddsRichard Roeperon August 18, 2021 at 10:30 am
Early on in the raw and lovely and sometimes heartbreakingly authentic “Flag Day,” a man is driving with his family down a winding country road in the middle of the night. While the man’s wife and son are sleeping, he perches his 11-year-old daughter on his lap and says it’s time for her to learn how to drive. It looks like we’re going to have one of those sepia-toned, dripping-in-nostalgia, Americana moments — but then the man announces he’s going to take a nap, and he does just that, leaving his terrified daughter to take the wheel on her own.
This guy isn’t some colorful, larger than life, 20th century dad. He might well think of himself that way, but he’s a stone-cold sociopath.
Every five years or so, Sean Penn directs a film, with the highlights including “The Crossing Guard” (1995), “The Pledge” (2001) and “Into the Wild” (2007). His style favors Terrence Malick and his interests turn toward deliberately paced character studies about deeply flawed individuals caught up in troubling, sometimes deadly circumstances. In “Flag Day,” Sean Penn directs himself for the first time and has cast Dylan Penn, his daughter with Robin Wright, as the lead — and the two are absolutely mesmerizing together, beautifully capturing the enormously complicated dynamic between a con man of a father who rolls out of bed with a fresh set of lies ready to go every morning, and an emotionally broken and bruised daughter who knows her dad is a walking bundle of disappointment but wants to believe that this time — this one time — he really has changed.
Set mostly in the 1970s and 1980s and filmed in a style reminiscent of character-driven gems from that period, “Flag Day” is based on journalist Jennifer Vogel’s 2005 memoir “Flim-Flam Man: The True Story of My Father’s Counterfeit Life.” In the mid-1970s, Sean Penn’s John Vogel and his wife Patty (Katheryn Winnick from “Vikings” and “Big Sky”) are living in Minnesota with their two young children, 6-year-old Jennifer (Addison Tymec) and 4-year-old Nick (Beckam Crawford) in a house John bought on credit, a house filled with the sounds of fighting and anger as John’s get-rich-quick schemes never pan out while Patty crawls inside a bottle.
When John finally leaves for good, things get so bad with Patty and her drinking and depression that Jennifer and Nick eventually go to live with their father and his young girlfriend Debbie (Bailey Noble). For one fleeting summer, things are mostly good, as evidenced in a sweet scene where John, who loves classical music, is mortified but then tickled when Debbie puts on “Night Moves” by Bob Seger and dances with the kids under the stars. But then it’s time for the kids to go back home and for John to get mixed up in more trouble of his own making.
When we flash forward to the early 1980s, Dylan Penn is now playing the teenage Jennifer, and her brother Hopper is playing Nick in a much smaller role. Jennifer is a goth teen who’s self-medicating with all manner of drugs and is constantly at odds with her mother — and when Mom’s horror show of a live-in boyfriend sexually assaults Jennifer and her mother chooses denial, Jennifer sets off to live with her father.
They’ll fix each other. That’s Jennifer’s plan. She’ll get clean and take a job and maybe even go back to school, and he’ll find work in the straight world and stop with all the shady nonsense. You can imagine how that pans out. Real-life father and daughter are brilliant together even as they employ very different acting styles, with Dylan Penn staying mostly in a lower key while Sean goes as big as he’s ever gone, and we know that’s some big-time raging. It makes sense, though, because the story is being told through Jennifer’s prism — she provides the voice-over narration, and this is really her story — and it would stand to reason she would view her father, fatal flaws and all, as this exaggerated, tragic character.
In the final passages that come full circle with the film’s prologue, Jennifer is in her 20s and working for the Minneapolis alternative paper City Pages, and John has done a long stretch in prison for robbing a bank. One day Jennifer looks out the window of the newspaper’s offices and there’s her father, paroled and freshly groomed and hoping against hope she’ll talk to him for the first time in years, even though he doesn’t deserve that after a lifetime of letdowns.
Of course, we know Jennifer is going to come down the stairs and open the door one more time — and the prologue already told us it’s not going to end well. All we can do is hope Jennifer has reached a place where the lies and the cons can’t hurt her anymore.
4 killed, 2 wounded, in shootings Tuesday in ChicagoSun-Times Wireon August 18, 2021 at 9:24 am
Four people were killed, and two others were wounded, in shootings Tuesday in Chicago, including a 16-year-old who was fatally shot in Little Village on the West Side.
About 7:20 p.m., the teen was near a sidewalk in the 2500 block of South Harding Avenue when two people approached and one opened fire, Chicago Police said. He was struck in the head and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. He has not been identified yet.
About an hour prior, a man was shot to death on the Far South Side. About 6:10 p.m., the 28-year-old was found on the porch of a residence on the 300 block of East 131st Place with multiple gunshot wounds to his body, police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene. He has not yet been identified.
A man was killed in a shooting in Austin on the West Side. The 31-year-old was near a sidewalk about 2:45 p.m. in the 4800 block of West Fulton Street when someone approached him and unleashed gunfire, police said. The man was struck multiple times and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. He hasn’t been identified.
A person was found fatally shot in Riverdale on the Far South Side. About 2 a.m., the unidentified male was found outside in the 700 block of East 132nd Street, with a gunshot wound to his neck, police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Police are questioning a person of interest.
In non-fatal shootings, a 63-year-old woman was shot in East Garfield Park on the West Side. About 11:15 p.m., she was at home asleep in the 3300 block of West Washington Boulevard, when she heard several shots fired through a window and felt a pain, police said. She was struck in the back, and taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital, where she is in good condition.
One other person was shot.
Five people were killed, and nine others were wounded in shootings Monday citywide.
Teen boy shot in Humboldt ParkSun-Times Wireon August 18, 2021 at 8:14 am
A 15-year-old boy was shot Wednesday in Humboldt Park on the Northwest Side.
About 1:35 a.m., he was standing outside in the 1000 block of North Pulaski Road, when someone inside a dark-colored sedan fired several shots at him, Chicago police said.
He was struck in the eye and taken to Stroger Hospital, where he is in critical condition, police said.
Area Four detectives are investigating.
Teen boy shot in Humboldt ParkSun-Times Wireon August 18, 2021 at 8:14 am Read More »
Sky lose to Wings 80-76 after Candace Parker heads to bench with ankle injuryAnnie Costabileon August 18, 2021 at 3:01 am
Following the Sky’s overtime win against the Seattle Storm, which was the most-watched WNBA regular-season game since 2012, Candace Parker said the team got lucky.
Elaborating Parker explained in the WNBA it takes a little luck to pull out certain wins, especially coming off a month-long break. The Sky were adjusting to getting back on the court which contributed to their slow start.
Tuesday night the Sky were still finding their rhythm on offense, losing to the Wings 80-76.
Parker went to the bench early in the third quarter after a collision under the basket that left her on the floor and did not return. She emerged from the locker room in the fourth quarter with ice on her left ankle and both knees.
“It’s the same ankle that she sprained but it’s not as bad,” coach and general manager James Wade said. “There is not as much swelling as before so we’re optimistic.”
Kahleah Copper exploited the Wings in transition and was the only offensive spark for the Sky in the first half with 12 points. She went scoreless in the third quarter, exiting the game late with an apparent ankle injury.
She added four points after returning to the game in the fourth and finished with 16.
Defensively, the Sky played through possessions and forced multiple Wings turnovers on shot clock violations but were outrebounded 45-32 and allowed 17 second-chance points.
An 11-point deficit to open the fourth quarter was too much for the Sky to come back from despite Allie Quigley’s best efforts. She led the team in scoring with 27 on 77.8% shooting from three.
“We have to figure it out,” Quigley said. “We’re all capable scorers, individually and collectively. It’s about being the ‘I want to score more than you want to stop me’ kind of players.”
Stefanie Dolson’s 3×3 gold-medal-winning teammate Allisha Gray led the Wings with 20 points. Copper who was tasked with guarding Arike Ogunbowale most of the night held her to 15.
Next up for the Sky is a matchup with the Minnesota Lynx at home. The Lynx had their eight-game win streak snapped by the Connecticut Sun on Tuesday night. Fourth in league standings, they remain ahead of the Sky who are sixth after Tuesday’s loss.
Parker said Tuesday morning the Sky are focused on standings as long as the league continues its single-game elimination format in the first two rounds of the playoffs.
“I’d take our chances in a series and I think most teams would take their chances in a series,” Parker said. “At the same time, you just want to be playing really good basketball.”
Chicago fishing, Midwest Fishing Report: Waiting on shore Chinook; inland bass, catfish and bluegillDale Bowmanon August 18, 2021 at 1:05 am
The wait for Chinook to come to shore goes on as there are signs of some kings closer to shore; that leads this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report; plus the stable summer weather has smoothed fishing for bass, catfish and bluegill on inland waters around Chicago.
BoRabb Williams texted the photo at the top and this on Monday:
I got some Big Blue Catfish at Braidwood… including a 22 lb Blue….. using fresh shad
I released the Big ones
Kept 6 eaters
I like 5 pounders to 8
A good philosophy.
ILLINOIS FROG SEASON
Illinois’ bullfrog (only) season runs through Oct. 15. A fishing license is required. “Bullfrogs may be taken by hook and line, gig, pitchfork, spear, bow and arrow, hand, or landing net.” Daily bag limits eight, possession limit 16.
LAKEFRONT PARKING
Chicago Park District’s parking passes for the fisherman’s parking lots at DuSable and Burnham harbors are on sale at Henry’s Sports and Bait in Bridgeport and Park Bait at Montrose Harbor.
Readers suggest SpotHero app downtown. Otherwise, here are some basics: Foster (free street parking or pay lot); Montrose (now a mix of metered and free street parking); Belmont (pay lots on north and south sides); Diversey (pay lot or street parking); DuSable Harbor (pay lot or fisherman’s lot); Northerly Island/Burnham Harbor (meters, pay lot or fisherman’s lot); 31st/Burnham (meter parking between McCormick Place and 31st Street Harbor); Oakwood/39th (meters); 63rd Street/Casino Pier (pay lot); Steelworkers Park (free street parking at east end of 87th); Cal Park (free parking).
AREA LAKES
Jonathan Greene with a “pond-hoppin” catfish.Provided
Kevin Greene emailed the photos above and below, and this:
Was waiting on my son Jonathan to do a bit of night fishing for cats and threw out a 1/48oz jig with Bobby Garland swimmin minnow got this nice 3.96 lg mouth just after 8pm Sunday . Not long after my bass Jonathan landed this Channel cat on a nightcrawler . Bites lately few & far between but when they hit its on. NW Burbs still plenty of action for crappie Bluegill Carp Cats and nice bass gotta love Pond Hoppin.
Yes, to pond hopping.
Kevin Greene with a “pond-hoppin” largemouth bass.Provided
Ken “Husker” O’Malley with a late-summer largemouth bass.Provided
Ken “Husker” O’Malley emailed the photos above and below and this:
Hey Dale,
Here is a recap of this past weeks fishing.
Area lakes- typical summer patterns continue.
Bass are excellent early morning hours. Senkos are producing the best with top water poppers not far behind. During evening hours, frogs and chatterbaits produce decent numbers.
Bluegill are close to shore during morning and evening hours. Ice jigs tipped with plastics pitched to the schools will take the aggressive biters. It’s a good time to get the kids out for some fun.
Here is the nature pic of the week [below]. Another good day of fishing coming to an end.
TTYL
—
Ken “Husker” O’Malley
Husker Outdoors
Waterwerks fishing team
Day’s end of fishing scene.Ken “Husker” O’Malley
Pete Lamar emailed on Monday:
HI Dale,
I’ll submit this now since I won’t be fishing today or tomorrow.
I fished a couple of local ponds/lakes over the weekend. One was a park district pond. Ordinarily I wouldn’t bother on a cloudless hot afternoon. But I had to be in the neighborhood, I had time to kill and a rod in the car. It turned out to be a wise decision: bluegills were in tight to shore and were competing aggressively to eat anything that looked edible.
The next evening, I fished a forest preserve lake that holds some big bass and bluegills. It was so overgrown with aquatic vegetation that all I could do was throw a popper into openings in the weeds and hope. It was not productive. I didn’t see any small boats or kayaks out either. Maybe they didn’t want to fight against the vegetation to row to their usual spots.
. . .
Pete
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported good bass being caught on frogs in the western suburbs.
BIG FISH: The Forest Preserve District of Will County’s Big Fish Contest at Monee Reservoir runs through Aug. 31. Click here for details.
BRAIDWOOD LAKE
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview.
CHAIN O’LAKES AREA
Kyle at Triangle Sports and Marine in Antioch said channel catfish are eating everywhere; muskie are active outside the weed line, especially on Channel, Catherine and Marie; flipping a weedless jig and crawler piece outside of weed lines in 8-10 feet producing walleye; panfish good off docks or along weed lines; some white bass in 15-20 on a jig and minnow or Gulp! under schools of bait.
NOTE: Check updates on water conditions at foxwaterway.com or (847) 587-8540.
NOTE 2: The Stratton Lock and Dam is open 8 a.m. to midnight through Sept. 30.
CHICAGO RIVER
Steve Palmisano at Henry’s Sports and Bait texted:
The boys have been catching large and small mouth bass in the Chicago river downtown on deep running crank baits.
Jesse Gonzalez with a slab crappie from the Chicago River.Provided by Jeffrey Williams
On Monday, Jeffrey Williams messaged the photo above and this:
Beautiful Slab
14 1/2 inches
It is a beautiful slab, even more so coming from the Chicago River.
DELAVAN LAKE, WISCONSIN
Dave Duwe emailed:
Delavan Lake 8/16/21 through 8/23/21
. I’ve been catching some however the bite has slowed from the last few weeks. Bluegills continue to be the best bite on the lake, if you can’t catch your limit you should hang up the pole.
Largemouth bass are still on the deep weedline in 15-20 ft of water or in the slop in 3-4 ft of water. The deep fish are biting on drop shot nightcrawlers or drop shot plastic worms, green pumpkin is the best color. Good locations are by the yacht Club or by Willow Point. The big schools of fish are not around anymore, so you need to move around a lot to catch your fish.
Bluegills are pretty much all over. Most of the fishermen are catching them in 18-20 ft of water. You can catch them on wax worms or leaf worms. I prefer straight lining them beneath the boat with leaf worms or Hali jigs tiped with wax worms. The best location is by the gray condo point or by Lake Lawn Lodge.
Walleye fishing has been very slow this week. Most of the fish are coming on large leeches fished on a lindy rig in 15-20 ft of water. Look for the fish by Browns Channel or by the Village Supper Club point. Very few legal fish are being caught.
Northern Pike have not been cooperating much at all. I have fished them 5 or 6 times in the last week with only one or two to show for my effort. I would wait until the weather becomes more stable to try for them. I have no idea why the fishing has been so tough for the Northern.
Good luck and I hope to see you on the water. For guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 608-883-2050
DOWNSTATE
POWERTON: Hours are 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. through Sept. 30.
EMIQUON: Access permits and liability waivers are again required. They are available Tuesday to Saturday at Dickson Mounts Museum, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
HENNEPIN-HOPPER: Open through Sept. 6. Closed Mondays (except Labor Day). Check regulations at http://www.wetlands-initiative.org/dixon-paddling-fishing.
SHELBYVILLE: Check with Ken Wilson of Lithia Guide Service. SOUTHERN ILLINOIS: Check with Jason Johns of Boneyard Fishing.
FOX RIVER
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported river came up, but it is falling again; generally slow fishing.
Pete Lamar emailed:
HI Dale,
I’ll submit this now since I won’t be fishing today or tomorrow.
. . .
I went to a Fox tributary late yesterday to pursue smallmouths. Lately when I’ve fished the tribs it’s been during or right after a heavy rain; I’ve found myself working upstream to find water clear enough to fish. Not yesterday: water had dropped to normal Summer levels and was clear. I tried poppers and streamers; sub-surface was more productive. Ken G. has mentioned the strong spring flow on this creek. I located some of it yesterday: the water was downright cold near the springs. It felt great to wet wade on an August afternoon.
Pete
GENEVA LAKE, WISCONSIN
Arden Katz said pumpkinseeds and bluegill were good in Geneva Bay in 20-25 feet, drop-shotting Nail Tails and spikes, had to weed through smaller ones, biggest pumpkinseed went 9 1/2 inches; middle of the night, drop-shotting the points in 17-20 feet produced smallmouth.
Dave Duwe emailed:
Lake Geneva 8/17/08 through 8/24/08
This past week, the boat traffic on Lake Geneva has been immense, this is pretty normal for a week before a holiday and with the kids going back to school soon. After Labor Day, the traffic will slow down and some of the best fishing will occur.
Largemouth bass can be caught either flipping the piers or Carolina rigging on the deep weedlines. The best approach for flipping the piers, is a black and blue jig tipped with a craw. For the deep weedline fish, try a green pumpkin lizard. The best depth for the deep fish is 20-26 ft of water. The key to success is a hard bottom. Look for locations like the 700 club point or Black Point. You want the scattered weeds with the steep break. Some of the fish last week were coming out of 30 ft of water. They were chasing the minnow pods.
Lake Trout has been hit or miss. I trolled several times last week with no success. The floating weeds have been difficult to work around. You want to troll the main lake basin in 55-80 ft of water. Most of the fish that were caught last week were caught off of nickel/blue or nickel/green spoons.
Smallmouth bass have been hitting in 33-38 ft of water. The best approach is either nightcrawlers or small yellow perch fished off the lindy rig. Look for the fish to the west of conference point or by the Military Academy. Some of the fish have been in excess of 20 inches, however there are a lot of 14-15 inch fish as well.
Rock bass and bluegills are pretty much everywhere on the weedline in 15 ft of water. The best approach is split shotting nightcrawlers. The average size of the bluegills is about 8 inches and rock bass can exceed 1 1/2 lbs.
Northern Pike fishing has been slower than recent years. You need to fish multiple spots to catch 4-5 fish per 4 hour trip. For some reason the fish aren’t biting as good as they have in the past. Lindy rigged suckers are the best approach. Look for them by the narrows near the red sailboat or by Linn Pier by Pier 666.
Walleye are being caught at night using large Rapalas fished in 15 ft of water. The best location is either Trinkes or Williams Bay.
Good luck and I hope to see you on the water. For guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 608-883-2050
GREEN LAKE AREA, WISCONSIN
Guide Mike Norris emailed:
Fishing Report – 8/15/2021
Mike Norris
Big Green Lake – Smallmouth bass are biting in 13 -18 ft where cribs are present along drop-offs, and on the outside edge of the deep weed lines. Tube baits and Ned rigs have been my best producers. Largemouth bass are shallower and are relating to patches of weeds located on main lake flats. Bluegill fishing is ridiculous. Massive schools of gills up to 9 inches are roaming just outside of the drop-offs. Locate pods of bluegills in 20 – 30 ft of water with your electronics, then fish for them with a red worm threaded on a #6 hook on a drop shot rig.
To book a guide trip reach out to me via my Facebook page at mike.norris.7773 or email me through my website at www.comecatchsmallmouth.com
GREEN/STURGEON BAYS, WISCONSIN
Click here for the Wisconsin DNR weekly report.
HEIDECKE LAKE
Bob Johnson with a Heidecke Lake smallmouth bass.Provided
Bob Johnson emailed the photo above and this;
Hi Dale –
Back to Heidecke Lake this weekend with success. I wanted to get back to River but the rains rose the river too high for how I fish it. I tried several techniques for Bass but the 3/8 oz jig with crawfish tail and texas rig also with a crawfish imitation worked best for these late summer smallmouth and a few largemouth. Crainkbaits, surface lures and spinner baits were not working so stay away from those lures for now on Heidecke
Open 6 a.m. (6:30 bank fishing) to sunset. Click here for the promising preview.
KANKAKEE RIVER
George Peters with a good Kankakee River smallmouth bass.Provided
George Peters emailed the photo above and this:
water up from showers last week. Fish move more out of the current to feed, like this 18″ and a few more in the 15-16″ range. G. Peters
LAKE ERIE
Click here for the Ohio DNR Report.
LAKEFRONT
On shore and near-shore, the wait is on for incoming Chinook; in deeper water lake trout continue to make the days with the occasional big king and steelhead.
Chad Misner caught big lake trout in 160 feet of water streight out of Montrose Harbor on the Massive Confusion.Provided by Capt. Tim Frey
Capt. Tim Frey sent the photo above and this from the Massive Confusion on Tuesday:
Chad Misner caught a 19lb and 26lb lake trout in 160 feet of water. Streight out of montrose harbor on the massive confusion with captain Tim Frey
Capt. Mike Fuys with a northern pike, part of a harbor grand slam last week at Waukegan Harbor.Provided via Facebook
On Thursday, Capt. Scott Wolfe of School of Fish Charters messaged:
My charter partner Capt Mike Fuys messing around in Waukegan harbor this afternoon
It was part of a Facebook post about smallmouth bass, largemouth bass and northern pike (above) caught in the Waukegan harbor.
On Monday, Jason “Special One” Le texted the photo below and gave this account on waiting on Chinook to come ashore on the lakefront:
No kings yet
Two [carp] today at Montrose harbor
While waiting on Chinook to come on shore, Jason “Special One” Le has had success with the other big fish on the Chicago lakefront, carp.Provided
Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:
Just some sheep head that’s about all there is to report
Capt. Bob Poteshman of Confusion Charters said there was good fishing out of Chicago with good lakers in 130-180 feet, “lots of lakers out there;” out of North Point, lots of lakers, with coho, steelhead and two mature pink salmon Tuesday in 200-300 on a smorgasbord of lures; “really good fishing.”
Capt. Scott Wolfe emailed:
Fishing was really good this week. Not many big staging kings but limits of lake trout with big steelhead every trip, an occasional big coho and some 3 year old kings too. 115 to 150 had the most fish. We caught them out to 200 feet this week. Some smaller boats are getting good steelhead out in 300 feet. Spoons continue to be the lures preferred with Warrior Spoiler series (there are about a dozen with “Spoiler” in the name and they are all working), Voodoo and Green Menace all excellent. Downriggers 50 to the bottom and on 10 color leads to 400 coppers worked.
Harbor fishing was also excellent. LM and SM bass, rock bass, northern and the omnipresent sheepshead were all taken casting the weeds. People chasing those species should get out now because the kings, then coho, will be coming in in a week or two. They always seem to chase out or scare the resident fish and those species become hard to find.
Capt. Scott Wolfe
School of Fish Charters/Manipulator
schooloffishcharters.com
630-341-0550
LaSALLE LAKE
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview of prospects.
MADISON LAKES, WISCONSIN
Click here for the update from D&S Bait.
MAZONIA
Both units are open for fishing.
NORTHERN WISCONSIN
Kurt Justice at Kurt’s Island Sport Shop in Minocqua emailed:
Stable weather for the past few days (8/13 onward) through the coming week should mean some easier patterning of the bite. Unfortunately, the bites have not been great. Bluebird days make for great experiences on the water, but not the easiest for fishing.
Smallmouth Bass: Good – Some nice fish to 20″ this weekend working 16-22′ edges using heavy tubes, drop-shots and Ned worm rigs. Fish not concentrated, but coontail edges and rocky humps producing.
Largemouth Bass: Good – Top-water action picking up on the warm evenings. Buzz baits, Whopper Ploppers and Jitterbug users reporting nice action last two hours before dark. Daytime Wacky Worming in 8-12′ cabbage beds doing well.
Bluegills: Good – Best action suspended outside coontail edges in 14-16′ using small leeches or Mini-Mites suspended 4-6′ down below small floats.
Yellow Perch: Good – Active along outside weed edges on 1/2 crawlers or medium fatheads. Lots of smaller fish, but sorting through enough to make a meal.
Northern Pike: Good-Fair – Not as good on the brightest days, but wind helps. Spinner baits and chatter baits always a favorite. Weedless spoons (Silver Minnows, Jawbreakers) also good, tip with a 3-4″ twister tail for added action.
Crappies: Fair – Tough to find consistent action working weed tops. Some anglers finding a little action outside coontail edges using minnows.
Musky: Fair – Best early or late in the day on top-water baits worked over weeds leading to deeper water. Bucktails bulged under surface, as well as large spinner baits also producing.
Walleye: Fair-Poor – Very early or late in the evening. Whole crawlers worked along 12-18′ edges dropping to deeper water produced some nice “slot” fish but action spotty.
With lows in upper 50’s to low 60’s over night and into the low 80’s through the day forecasted for the next week, the stability should help improve the bite. August can be a finicky month, with some species of weeds dying off, minnow and small fish populations peaked, and very nice weather (read: lots of sun) making for challenging fishing at times. Key in on low light periods and don’t fret the mid-day stuff.
Kurt Justice
Kurt’s Island Sport Shop
Like us on FaceBook
NORTHWEST INDIANA
A Chinook caught near shore Monday at Burns Ditch.Provided by Capt. Rich Sleziak
Capt. Rich Sleziak at Slez’s Bait in Lake Station texted:
A few fish are starting to show just outside of burns ditch this one was caught Monday morning
The offshore bite is way out in 150 to 200ft of water and most fish are deep in water column
Willow slough hasn’t stopped giving up gills boat fishing best but early am and at dark bank fisherman are getting a fair amount also
Catfish at night on triple s stinkbait and cut bait fishing burns ditch near portage river walk is still going good.
Crappie in the evening and into dark at lake George in Hobart fishing 3rd street bridge and Wisconsin street bridge using minnows.
Christina Petrites at Stan’s Bait & Tackle Center in Hammond emailed:
Hello, Dale. With the near-perfect weather coming up this week, it gives everyone a chance to enjoy the outdoors. Might as well take advantage of it & get in some good Fishin’ time!
Fishing on Lake Michigan has begun to heat up; some nice kings have been caught at sunrise & sunset. Lures of choice are glow spoons & white paddles with a glow fly.
Perch fishing has really picked up this week fishing in 32-40 FOW. Smaller minnows, beemoths, & red worms are working well.
River fishing remains good for Walleye, Smallmouth, & Catfish.
Walleye are hitting excellently at Wolf Lake on leeches & nightcrawlers.
Bass are hitting well on nightcrawlers, larger minnows, & Senko worms.
Catfish have been caught in nice sizes & numbers at Pine Lake & Dowling Park, with stinkbait, shad, & herring.
Some inland lakes, particularly Bass & Stone, are doing well on Bluegill & Crappie. Willow Slough has been having moderate success as well.
ROOT RIVER, WISCONSIN
Click here for the Wisconsin DNR’s report, usually on Tuesday or Wednesday.
SHABBONA LAKE
Concessions are going. Site hours through Oct. 31 are 6 a.m.-10 p.m. daily
SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN LAKEFRONT
Chase Breen, 7, with bounty caught out of Waukegan.Provided
Justin Breen tweeted photos of a good outing out of Racine last week:
My son Chase Breen, 7, with two brown trout he caught in Racine
We were on charter boat just off the Root River exit point into Lake Michigan. Probably 1/4 mile into Lake Michigan
If you’re wondering about Chinook, he added:
We had a 20-pound-plus king salmon on the line, and it broke off right at the boat before the captain got the net on it.
Click here for the southern Lake Michigan reports from the Wisconsin DNR.
SOUTHWEST MICHIGAN
Phil Schuman at Tackle Haven in Benton Harbor said perch are very slow; mostly lake trout with a few salmon in 100-150 feet; smallmouth are decent with a few walleye in the river.
Paddle and Pole hosts the Berrien Springs Fish Ladder Camera.
WOLF RIVER, WISCONSIN
Guide Bill Stoeger in Fremont texted:
Water level is still coming up, fishing has really slowed down, or I should say catching has slowed down. Should crest today or tomorrow, then things may get better
16-year-old fatally shot in Little VillageMohammad Samraon August 18, 2021 at 1:29 am
A 16-year-old was fatally shot in Little Village on the West Side.
About 7:20 p.m., the teen was near a sidewalk in the 2500 block of South Harding Avenue when two people approached and one opened fire, Chicago Police said.
He was struck in the head and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not been identified yet.
No one was in custody.
16-year-old fatally shot in Little VillageMohammad Samraon August 18, 2021 at 1:29 am Read More »
Squeak, member of West Side hip-hop collective Pivot Gang, shot dead at 26Evan F. Mooreon August 17, 2021 at 10:59 pm
Some artists who make it big can become arrogant, but friends say that wasn’t the case with Squeak, a producer of the Saba-led Chicago hip-hop group Pivot Gang.
When Kierra Wooden, a South Side activist and artist, planned her first show at Pilsen’s now-shuttered La Catrina Cafe in 2018, she got an unexpected message from Squeak offering to DJ the event for free.
“I was shocked he came to me willing to do that for free,” Wooden said. “I was so happy because I’ve been a fan of the Pivot Gang. He was so nice.”
Squeak, whose legal name was Javunte Wheeler, and his uncle, 27-year-old Darion Hood, were shot to death Monday in the 5000 block of West St. Paul Avenue.
Squeak’s younger sister Rayvita Pernell told the Chicago Sun-Times that surveillance video from a Ring doorbell shows the men were killed by a passenger in Squeak’s car.
Squeak had driven to his grandmother’s house, then stepped out to talk with his uncle, Pernell said.
The video shows the passenger getting out, shooting both men, getting back in Squeak’s car, and driving off, Pernell said.
“This person was in the car with him and he knew him,” Pernell said. “So apparently he trusted him and took him to his grandmother’s home and was talking with him at the trunk of the car and this is what happened.”
Detectives were reviewing surveillance video related to the shooting, a police spokesperson said, but did not provide additional details Tuesday.
Squeak grew up with seven siblings, and was one of four children adopted by his late mother who gave him his nickname when he was a child, Pernell said.
Squeak had his second child, a boy, in May, his sister said.
“He was a sweet boy. They were all sweet. They were young kids that did kid things. There was nothing about him being on the streets,” Pernell said about Squeak and her other siblings. “They were never violent. There were, ‘Yes m’am, no ma’m, yes auntie.’ This is how they talked.”
Pernell said Squeak got into music “just rapping around the house, playing the music like boys do.”
“Then he started traveling, making a little money off it and playing shows,” she said.
In 2017, Squeak explained how he got into music in an interview with Elevator Magazine.
“I had just gotten out of high school, and I just started getting in trouble and ended up on house arrest” Squeak said in the interview. His brother, a Pivot Gang member who goes by FRSH Waters, told him to go to the studio and work with Pivot Gang.
Squeak did just that and felt it was a perfect fit. “I always knew I was gonna do something, I just never knew what,” Squeak said then.
South Sider DJ Skoli became friends with Squeak after a show in 2016.
“I meet a lot of people in the industry and due to Pivot Gang’s stature, I thought he would be full of himself. I got to know him as a sweet and kind person. He was always willing to work and become a part of the community,” Skoli said.
Skoli said he was in shock that Squeak became a victim of gun violence.
“I couldn’t believe that something like this would happen to him,” Skoli said. “I started thinking about the city and how many people have passed in similar ways. It’s not normal, the things that happen in our city.”
In 2017, Pivot Gang rapper John Walt was stabbed to death during a fight.

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