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Chicago police officer killed, another seriously wounded in West EnglewoodSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 6:39 am

A Chicago police officer was killed and another was seriously wounded in a shooting Saturday night on the South Side, officials said.

The officers were shot during a traffic stop shortly after 9 p.m. at 63rd Street and Bell Avenue and returned fire, hitting at least one suspect, police said.

Both officers were taken to University of Chicago Medical Center, where one of them — a woman — was pronounced dead, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

The other officer was “fighting for his very life” in critical condition, according to First Deputy Eric Carter who talked to reporters outside the hospital early Sunday.

“We ask the city of Chicago to pray for both officers, their families and their fellow officers who are struggling with the facts of this,” Carter said. “It’s just another example of how the Chicago Police Department and these officers put their lives above that of others to protect this city day in, day out.”

With him was Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who said “obviously our hearts ache for the loss of life.”

Lightfoot said the officer who died was “very young on the job, but incredibly enthusiastic to do the work.”

“We must remind ourselves every day that our officers are fearless in the face of danger,” she said. “It’s a very sad and tragic day for our city.”

Police Supt. David Brown was out of town Saturday to finalize the details of his mother’s funeral. He was expected to return to the city Sunday.

Two suspects were taken into custody shortly after the shooting, according to police communications from the scene. The one who was wounded was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn. His condition was not known.

A third suspect, a woman, was being sought by police late Saturday. At least least one weapon was recovered at the scene, Carter said.

Police declined to release more information about the circumstances of the shooting, saying more information would be available later Sunday as detectives continued to investigate.

Some of the first police calls from the scene described one officer being shot.

“Officer down,” an officer radioed around 9:10 p.m.

“I got an officer down,” a police dispatcher repeats. “6-3 and Bell, officer down, officer down, shot twice, shot at police, officer down.

“Stay off my air, stay off my air,” the dispatcher continues, asking for no unnecessary calls on the channel. “Everybody stay off the air, I got an officer down, 6-3 and Bell, start rolling.

An officer is heard yelling, in apparent distress, and the dispatcher says, “Give me two ambulances, two ambulances needed for two officers down, two officers down … Get those officers wrapped up going to 6-3 and Bell. I want a perimeter set up three blocks, north south, east, west.”

About a block from the shooting, neighbors looked out cautiously from their front yards on what one resident said was a “quiet block.”

“Be careful, they’re still looking for someone,” a woman warned a neighbor as she walked by.

Dozens of officers could be seen patrolling the neighborhood and blocking streets in the area while a police helicopter flew overhead.

Officers tied blue ribbons to trees shortly before midnight near the medical examiner’s office in preparation for a procession to bring the officer who died to the morgue.

Outside the medical center, a large crowd of police officers gathered outside an ambulance bay. They included city, county and state police officials and supporters.

Some in the crowd held a group prayer and others hugged each other and engaged in hushed conversation. Water bottles were passed out by police personnel wearing jackets that read “Peer Support.”

The last Chicago Police officers who died in the line of duty were Conrad Gary and Eduardo Marmolejo, who were chasing a man with a gun on the Far South Side when they were struck by a train and killed in December of 2018.

The last officer shot to death in the line of duty was Samuel Jimenez, who was killed just a month earlier while responding to a shooting at Mercy Hospital. Three other people died, including the gunman.

Mohammad Samra contributed

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Chicago police officer killed, another seriously wounded in West EnglewoodSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 6:39 am Read More »

Chicago police officer killed, another seriously wounded in West EnglewoodSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 5:49 am

A Chicago police officer was killed and another was seriously wounded in a shooting Saturday night on the South Side, officials said.

The officers were shot during a traffic stop shortly after 9 p.m. at 63rd Street and Bell Avenue and returned fire, hitting at least one suspect, police said.

Both officers were taken to University of Chicago Medical Center, where one of them — a woman — was pronounced dead, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

The other officer was “fighting for his very life” in critical condition, according to First Deputy Eric Carter who talked to reporters outside the hospital early Sunday.

“We ask the city of Chicago to pray for both officers, their families [and] their fellow officers who are struggling with the facts of this,” Carter said.

With him was Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who said “obviously our hearts ache for the loss of life. It’s a very sad and tragic day for our city.”

Police Supt. David Brown was out of town Saturday to finalize the details of his mother’s funeral. He was expected to return to the city Sunday.

Two suspects were taken into custody shortly after the shooting, according to police communications from the scene. The one who was wounded was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, condition not known.

A third suspect, a woman, was being sought by police late Saturday.

About a block from the shooting, neighbors looked out cautiously from their front yards, which one referred to as a “quiet block.”

“Be careful, they’re still looking for someone,” a woman warned a neighbor as she walked by.

Dozens of officers could be seen patrolling the neighborhood and blocking streets in the area while a police helicopter flew overhead.

Officers tied blue ribbons to trees shortly before midnight near the Cook County medical examiner’s office in preparation for a procession to the morgue.

Outside the medical center, a large crowd of police officers gathered outside an ambulance bay. They included city, county and state police officials and supporters.

Some in the crowd held a group prayer and others held each other while engaged in hushed conversation. Water bottles were passed out by police personnel wearing jackets that read “Peer Support.”

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Chicago police officer killed, another seriously wounded in West EnglewoodSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 5:49 am Read More »

US rolls to women’s hoops gold medal in Sue Bird’s last OlympicsDoug Feinberg | Associated Presson August 8, 2021 at 4:50 am

SAITAMA, Japan — Sue Bird capped off her unblemished 17-year Olympics run with a record fifth gold medal.

All she and longtime U.S. teammate Diana Taurasi have done on the international stage is win and now stand alone with five gold medals — the first basketball players ever to accomplish that feat — after a 90-75 win over Japan on Sunday at the Tokyo Games.

“Couldn’t have asked for a better ending. There’s really not much else to say,” Bird said. “I feel so proud I’ve been able to wear this uniform for as long as I have, to play alongside this one as long as I have, We’ve won, and that’s obviously the story, but I don’t think there’s anyone else I’d rather do it with because we just have so much fun and I love you homie.”

The U.S. has now won the last seven Olympic gold medals matching the country’s men’s program for the most ever in a row. The men did it from 1936-68.

With Bird orchestrating the flow of games and Taurasi’s scoring, they have been a constant force for the U.S., providing stability for the women’s program since the 2004 Athens Games. They have won all 38 of the games at the Olympics they’ve competed in.

The pair walked off the court Sunday arm-in-arm for the last time, knowing their work was done. While Bird is finished, Taurasi said that she’ll be back for a sixth Olympics.

“See you in Paris!,” Taurasi said.

The names have changed around the pair, including greats Lisa Leslie, Sheryl Swoopes, Tina Thompson, Tamika Catchings and Sylvia Fowles, but the results haven’t.

The Americans are on a 55-game Olympic winning streak dating back to the bronze medal game of the 1992 Barcelona Games.

The U.S. let Japan know that wasn’t going to change on Sunday.

The Americans jumped out to a 18-5 lead behind a dominant first quarter by Brittney Griner. The team lead 23-14 after one as Griner had 10 points, taking advantage of the undersized Japanese team. Japan was able to get within six in the second quarter before the Americans went up 11 at the half and never looked back.

As the final buzzer sounded, Bird and Taurasi embraced and then proceeded to hug all of their teammates and the coaching staff.

Griner finished with 30 points, making 14 of her 18 shots.

While Bird has said she is moving on, the future is bright for the U.S. behind Griner, Breanna Stewart and the six newcomers on this year’s team. That included A’ja Wilson, who will be counted on to keep the streak going three years from now at the 2024 Paris Games. Wilson, who celebrated her 25th birthday on Sunday, made her presence felt in her Olympic debut, scoring 19 points in the gold medal game.

But there were other milestones of note Sunday besides Bird’s farewell.

The victory also made Dawn Staley, the first Black women’s basketball coach for the U.S., the second woman to win a gold medal as a player, assistant and head coach joining Anne Donovan.

The game also marked the end of Carol Callan’s run as the national team director. She started right before the Americans won the first gold of this streak in 1996 and has been the architect for this unprecedented run.

Japan, which was the only one of the 11 other teams to ever have beaten the U.S. in an Olympics, won a medal for the first time in the country’s history. The team’s best finish before Sunday was fifth.

The host nation has been on the rise since it hired coach Tom Hovasse. He said when he got the job 4 1/2 years ago that his team would be playing against the U.S. for the gold at the Tokyo Games — and would beat them.

He was half right.

The two teams met in preliminary pool play and the U.S. won by 17 points after trailing by two after the first quarter. Just like that game, the Americans used their dominant post advantage to control the title game. Japan’s biggest player was 6-foot-1 — no match for the imposing front line led by Griner, who is 6-9.

While the general public and family members couldn’t attend the games because of the coronavirus pandemic, Bird did have fiancee Megan Rapinoe in the stands cheering her on. Bird came over and embraced Rapinoe after the game. She helped the U.S. women’s soccer team win a bronze medal earlier this week, scoring two goals in that game.

A large contingent of Japanese volunteers, who had been in the Saitama Super Arena for the entire tournament sat and applauded their team. No actual cheering was allowed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

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US rolls to women’s hoops gold medal in Sue Bird’s last OlympicsDoug Feinberg | Associated Presson August 8, 2021 at 4:50 am Read More »

Chicago’s Week in Beer, August 9-12on August 8, 2021 at 4:49 am

The Beeronaut

Chicago’s Week in Beer, August 9-12

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Chicago’s Week in Beer, August 9-12on August 8, 2021 at 4:49 am Read More »

4 injured, 3 critically, in West Side shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 1:58 am

Four men were wounded in a shooting Saturday night on the Near West Side that left three of them in critical condition, police said.

The group was standing near a park shortly after 7 p.m. in the 200 block of South Maplewood Street when someone fired shots from a vehicle, according to Chicago police.

Three of the men, ages 23, 27 and 28, were struck multiple times and taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition, police said.

A 20-year-old man was struck in the ankle and taken to the same hospital in good condition, police said.

There was no one in custody.

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4 injured, 3 critically, in West Side shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 1:58 am Read More »

Kool & the Gang co-founder Dennis ‘Dee Dee’ Thomas dead at 70Associated Presson August 7, 2021 at 9:45 pm

Dennis “Dee Tee” Thomas, a founding member of the long-running soul-funk band Kool & the Gang known for such hits as “Celebration” and “Get Down On It,” has died. He was 70.

He died peacefully in his sleep Saturday in New Jersey, where he was a resident of Montclair, according to a statement from his representative.

Thomas was the alto sax player, flutist and percussionist. He served as master of ceremonies at the band’s shows. His last appearance with the group was July Fourth at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles.

Born Feb. 9, 1951, in Orlando, Florida, Thomas was known for his prologue on the band’s 1971 hit, “Who’s Gonna Take the Weight.” Known for his hip clothes and hats, he was also the group’s wardrobe stylist. In the early days, he served as their “budget hawk,” carrying their earnings in a paper bag stuffed into the bell of his horn, the statement said.

In 1964, seven teen friends created the group’s unique bland of jazz, soul and funk, at first calling themselves the Jazziacs. They went through several iterations before settling on Kool & the Gang in 1969. The group’s other founders are brothers Ronald and Robert Bell, and Spike Mickens, Ricky Westfield, George Brown and Charles Smith.

The band has earned two Grammy Awards and seven American Music Awards. They were honored in 2014 with a Soul Train Lifetime Achievement Award. Their music is heavily sampled and featured on film sound tracks, including those for “Rocky,” “Saturday Night Fever” and “Pulp Fiction.”

Among those Thomas is survived by are his wife, Phynjuar Saunders Thomas, daughter Tuesday Rankin and sons David Thomas and Devin Thomas.

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Kool & the Gang co-founder Dennis ‘Dee Dee’ Thomas dead at 70Associated Presson August 7, 2021 at 9:45 pm Read More »

Carlos Rodon bounces back to stymie Cubs with 11 strikeoutsJared Wyllyson August 8, 2021 at 12:03 am

The White Sox clinched the Wrigley portion of the crosstown series Saturday, beating the Cubs 4-0, and accentuated the difference in trajectory for Chicago’s baseball teams.

While the Cubs are just a week past trading away the main pieces of their championship core and eyeing a premium draft position in 2022, the Sox pushed to 19 games above .500 and are realistically a shoo-in to win their division and reach the playoffs for the second year in a row.

For the fifth time this season, Carlos Rodon recorded strikeouts in the double digits. Saturday’s tally was 11. Rodon was in command early Saturday, striking out the first four batters he faced. In his last two starts against the Brewers and Royals, Rodon had struggled in the early innings.

“The velocity was there. It was good,” Rodon said. [My] arm felt better with the little extra rest like we planned on. It just worked out.”

Manager Tony La Russa has stressed the importance of getting extra rest for his starters where possible, and he has used spot starts and off days to help make that possible.

Rodon went five-plus innings, allowing just four baserunners. He was pulled at 89 pitches after walking leadoff hitter Rafael Ortega in the sixth inning.

“Lot of swing and miss, but they still worked that pitch count up and got me out early,” Rodon said. “A little earlier than I wanted to be, but a good move by Tony. Got a fresh arm in and got out of the inning.”

Michael Kopech, Aaron Bummer, and former Cubs Craig Kimbrel and Ryan Tepera combined for the last 12 outs, holding the Cubs to just three hits after Rodon left the game.

La Russa said that Rodon told him before the sixth inning that he could go longer, but “he was talking more with his heart and his guts than with his head at that point.”

Instead of leaving Rodon on the mound on a hot and humid afternoon in a National League park where Rodon also had to hit, La Russa decided his starter had pitched enough.

“At that point, it was 2-0, it was all about winning the game,” La Russa said. “And we were noticing it. He was working all five innings that he was out there, sweating. Plus it’s a National League game, he had to go to bat two or three times. … He didn’t really get a chance to cool off. So it was all about not pushing him after what he had given us.”

With his 11 strikeouts and two hits allowed Saturday, Rodon has more than twice as many strikeouts (160) as hits allowed this season (75).

The Sox offense got to Cubs starter Adbert Alzolay early. They scored two runs in the first inning when Cesar Hernandez and Eloy Jimenez both singled and Yoan Moncada hit his 20th double of the season to drive them home.

But they struggled against Alzolay after the first. Alzolay tossed three straight 1-2-3 innings and had a stretch where he retired 11 straight Sox hitters.

The Sox eventually got to the Cubs bullpen in the seventh inning, a group much less potent now with Tepera and Kimbrel pitching for the other side of town, and tacked on two insurance runs in the eighth inning on back-to-back home runs by Cesar Hernandez and Jose Abreu.

“That’s the fruit of my work,” Hernandez said. “I’ve been working very hard to have a good season, to have good results. That’s why I’m able to get those 20 homers.”

As a group, the Sox pitchers combined for 17 strikeouts against the Cubs Saturday, and they fanned five of the Cubs batters at least twice. Willson Contreras struck out four times, and Ian Happ and Andrew Romine each had three strikeouts.

“Quite a few guys to get to the ninth. It’s nice when you have a bullpen like this,” Rodon said.

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Carlos Rodon bounces back to stymie Cubs with 11 strikeoutsJared Wyllyson August 8, 2021 at 12:03 am Read More »

Top cop recommends firing Chicago police officer who fatally shot apparently unarmed man in 2018Madeline Kenneyon August 7, 2021 at 11:51 pm

Chicago’s top cop has moved to fire an officer who fatally shot an apparently unarmed man during a 2018 foot chase on the South Side.

Officer Sheldon Thrasher used unnecessary force when he shot and killed Maurice Granton Jr. in Bronzeville, according to the recommendation Supt. David Brown submitted to the Chicago Police Board on Friday.

An evidentiary hearing will be held in the case before the officer’s fate is ultimately decided by the seven-member police board.

Thrasher shot Granton, 24, in the back on June 6, 2018 as he tried to jump over a fence in a vacant lot during a foot chase with police in the 4700 block of South Prairie Avenue.

Police body-cam video of the shooting appeared to show Granton without a gun as he grabbed the fence with both hands, the Sun-Times previously reported.

As Granton laid on the ground bleeding, onlookers gathered and began yelling at police.

“You see your homie right there? You see your homie shot . . . Get back, get back,” Thrasher allegedly told people in the crowd, according to police records.

Brown found that Thrasher violated police rules that prohibit “engaging in an unjustified verbal or physical altercation with any person” and “incompetency or inefficiency in the performance of duty,” the documents show.

Thrasher’s use of force “was not necessary to prevent death or great bodily harm from an imminent threat posed to him or another person,” Brown wrote.

The superintendent also said Thrasher didn’t activate his body-worn camera in a “timely manner.”

Granton’s family filed a wrongful death lawsuit a month after the shooting, alleging Granton didn’t pose an imminent threat to police and disputing a police statement that an “armed confrontation” led to the shooting.

Antonio Romanucci, a lawyer for the Granton family, said he agreed with Brown’s recommendation.

“The legal team representing the estate of Maurice Granton, Jr. has long believed that Officer Thrasher should have his badge taken away for this completely unnecessary shooting death,” Romanucci said in a statement. “The officer’s decision making that evening had tragic consequences and we will press for justice in the upcoming civil case so there can be accountability for this family that continues to grieve three years after that heartbreaking night.”

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Top cop recommends firing Chicago police officer who fatally shot apparently unarmed man in 2018Madeline Kenneyon August 7, 2021 at 11:51 pm Read More »

Roquan Smith added to Bears’ growing injury listMark Potashon August 7, 2021 at 10:19 pm

Coach Matt Nagy has downplayed the spate of injuries that has marked the opening 10 days of training camp. But when linebacker Roquan Smith is added to the list, it’s going to raise some eyebrows.

Smith did not practice Saturday because of a groin injury. Nagy did not provide much detail on Smith’s status, but was more uncertain than anything else.

“All those soft-tissue injuries … they’re all a little bit different,” Nagy said. “I feel better than worse with that. But they’re working through the whole timeline thing.”

Roquan, tight end J.P. Holtz (quad), wide receiver Thomas Ives (glute) and offensive lineman Lachavious Simmons (concussion) were added to the injury list. With four other players on “load management” days — linebackers Khalil Mack and Danny Trevathan, defensive end Akiem Hicks and tight end Jimmy Graham — the Bears had 21 players who did not participate Saturday.

That didn’t include six players who were limited: outside linebacker Robert Quinn (back), cornerback Desmond Trufant (thigh), wide receiver Damiere Byrd (heel), inside linebacker Joel Iyiegbuniwe (hamstring), running back Artavis Pierce (hamstring) and cornerback Michael Joseph (hamstring).

Eleven days into camp — and a week from the preseason opener against the Dolphins at Soldier Field next Saturday — the Bears’ injury list still included seven starters: Smith, safeties Eddie Jackson (hamstring) and Tashaun Gipson (groin), guard James Daniels (quad), tackles Germain Ifedi (hip) and Teven Jenkins (back) and nose tackle Eddie Goldman.

Even with 90 players on the roster, the absences have necessitated some roster management. With only 10 available offensive linemen, Alex Bars played took snaps with both the first and third teams.

“That’s where the coaching comes in with the volume and scripting and just being smart with that,” Nagy said prior to Saturday’s practice. “You just have to be able to adapt and make sure that you’re doing things the right way and I thought our guys did that [Friday].”

A friend indeed

Former Eagles coach Doug Pederson was an on-field guest at practice for the second consecutive day Saturday. Pederson and Nagy are close friends from their days coaching together with the Eagles and Chiefs.

“It’s nice even when we get off the field — he comes in and we watch some tape,” Nagy said. “It’s just good to talk head football coach stuff. I like hearing his ideas on stuff — whether it’s practice ideas, schedule ideas, game-day stuff. I respect who he is, how he does things. The guy won a Super Bowl [with the Eagles after the 2017 season]. It’s nice to have a friend here. And it helps him out, too.”

Bits and pieces

Newcomer Alec Ogletree had another interception in practice Saturday — his fifth in three days with the Bears. It came off an Andy Dalton pass that deflected off tight end Jesse James’ hands. … In an eventful live-tackling period with the offense at their own 1-yard line, running back David Montgomery broke free on a long run, aggressively stiff-arming defensive back Marqui Christian before Christian aggressively took Montgomery to the ground. … Defense dominated the period with the short-handed first-team defense getting three safeties against the short-handed second-team offense. Defensive end Angelo Blackson was in on two of them. Rookie quarterback Justin Fields responded with a 20-yard pass to James for a rare win.

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Roquan Smith added to Bears’ growing injury listMark Potashon August 7, 2021 at 10:19 pm Read More »

Don’t become a victim!on August 7, 2021 at 10:49 pm

Chicago’s Art and Beer Scene

Don’t become a victim!

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Don’t become a victim!on August 7, 2021 at 10:49 pm Read More »