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Fugitive wanted for murder of 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams arrested by FBI: prosecutorsJon Seidelon July 20, 2021 at 5:34 pm

A man wanted for months in connection with the fatal April shooting of 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams has been arrested by the FBI, federal prosecutors disclosed Tuesday.

Devontay Anderson has been wanted since late April when he was charged with first-degree murder in Cook County Circuit Court, records show. Last month, the FBI announced a $25,000 reward for information leading to his arrest and conviction.

Meanwhile, the feds separately charged Anderson with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. In a two-page document filed late Tuesday morning, Special Assistant U.S. Attorney M. David Habich disclosed the FBI arrested Anderson on Monday in Chicago.

No further details about Anderson’s arrest were contained in the document, which asked a judge to dismiss the federal unlawful flight charge against him. The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokeswoman for Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx told the Sun-Times in an email, “We have no information to provide.”

A complaint filed earlier in the federal case described the Chicago police response to the April 18 shooting at a McDonald’s in the 3200 block of West Roosevelt Road. It said officers found a 2003 Infiniti sedan “riddled with bullets in the drive-thru lane of the restaurant.”

Devontay Anderson wanted poster
Devontay Anderson
FBI

Jaslyn and her father, Jontae Adams, were in the Infiniti about 4:20 p.m. when two gunmen got out of an Audi and fired into the Infiniti, authorities have said. Jaslyn was killed and her father was wounded.

The complaint described surveillance video viewed by the Chicago Police Department that captured the shooting. It said the Audi contained three occupants when it pulled behind the Infiniti.

“Two adult males then exited the Audi,” the complaint said. “One male, later identified by CPD as Anderson, exited the rear passenger side of the Audi brandishing a Draco AK-47 pistol. The other male exited the Audi from the front passenger seat brandishing a Glock pistol. Both men opened fire on the Infiniti, firing dozens of rounds before re-entering the Audi and leaving the scene.”

Demond Goudy and Marion Lewis have also been charged in connection with the shooting. Prosecutors have said Lewis was the getaway driver but did not fire any of the shots.

The federal complaint says Chicago police identified Jaslyn’s father as a known gang member and began to scour social media accounts of rival gang members. It said they discovered an Instagram Live video which linked Anderson to the murder.

A separate public Facebook page connected to Anderson contained corroborating photos, the complaint said.

This is a developing story.

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Fugitive wanted for murder of 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams arrested by FBI: prosecutorsJon Seidelon July 20, 2021 at 5:34 pm Read More »

Athlete protests are expected to take place at Tokyo OlympicsGraham Dunbar | APon July 20, 2021 at 5:09 pm

TOKYO — Athlete activism is making a comeback at these Olympic Games.

When play starts at the Tokyo Games on Wednesday, acts of free expression of the kind athletes were long banned from making at the Olympics will take center stage.

The British women’s soccer team has pledged to take a knee before kickoff against Chile in their Olympic tournament opener in Sapporo, to show support for racial justice.

“We want to show to everyone this is something serious,” Britain defender Demi Stokes said. “What a way to do it, on an Olympic stage.”

One hour later in Tokyo, the United States and Sweden should follow in a gesture recognized globally since the murder of George Floyd 14 months ago. The England and Italy men’s teams took a knee before the European Championship final this month.

What is common in modern soccer starts a new era for Olympic athletes more than 50 years after the raised black-gloved fists of American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos in Mexico City made them icons and pariahs.

Still, it is a limited freedom allowed by the International Olympic Committee, which just this month eased its longstanding ban on all athlete protest inside the Games field of play. The change followed two reviews in 18 months by the IOC’s own athletes commission which advised against it.

Gestures are now allowed before races and games start, on the field, and at the start line.

Medal podiums remain off limits for protest, and even the IOC concessions left each sport’s governing body free to retain the ban.

Lawyers who study Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter — that banned any kind of “demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda” until July 2 — see issues ahead with athletes and the IOC heading on a fast track to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

“I think we can clearly expect some frictions around Rule 50 in the coming weeks,” sports law academic Antoine Duval said when hosting a recent debate on the inevitable athlete activism at Tokyo.

FIFA has had a relaxed view on taking a knee since players were inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement last year.

“FIFA believes in freedom of speech and opinion, and this applies to players, coaches, officials and any other person or organization within the scope of FIFA’s activities,” soccer’s world body said in a statement.

Expect raised fists at least on the start line in the main Olympic stadium when track and field events begin on July 30.

World Athletics president Sebastian Coe, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in the 1,500 meters, has gone even further. He put in play medal ceremonies where protest is denied as it was for Smith and Carlos in 1968.

“I’ve been very clear that if an athlete chooses to take the knee on a podium then I’m supportive of that,” Coe said inside Tokyo’s National Stadium last October.

Soccer and athletics are the progressive end of the 33 sports governing bodies at these Summer Games.

Swimmers’ pre-race introductions are similar to track athletes, one by one toward their starting block, but governing body FINA followed the IOC announcement by refusing to allow any gesture that could be viewed as protest.

FINA president Husain al-Musallam spoke of the pool deck “remaining a sanctity for sport and nothing else,” where there should be “respect for the greater whole, not the individual.”

That stance was at odds with the new Rule 50 guidance yet was defended by IOC president Thomas Bach last week.

“There is not really a ‘one size fits all’ solution,” Bach said when asked about the apparent contradiction of some Olympic athletes having fewer freedoms than others in Tokyo.

It will fall to the IOC to decide on potential disciplinary cases which it promised to handle “in full transparency.”

This could lead to inconsistencies, according to Mark James, who teaches sports law at Manchester Metropolitan University in England.

“There will be flashpoints,” James said in the Rule 50 debate hosted by Netherlands-based Asser Institute. “Why are some (gestures) acceptable but some are a breach?”

James anticipated issues over the political intent of flags, and if the more open approach to athlete free speech in Tokyo would survive in China at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.

What seems clear is a shift in the social media era of athletes’ influence over event organizers and sports bodies.

“It is not just an IOC challenge, this is global sport,” said David Grevemberg from the Geneva-based Centre for Sport and Human Rights.

“This is actually, I would say, a crossroads for all sport.”

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Athlete protests are expected to take place at Tokyo OlympicsGraham Dunbar | APon July 20, 2021 at 5:09 pm Read More »

My Stone Mountain story, and how I became the most objective person Rita ever knewon July 20, 2021 at 4:59 pm

Mom, I Think I’m Poignant!

My Stone Mountain story, and how I became the most objective person Rita ever knew

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My Stone Mountain story, and how I became the most objective person Rita ever knewon July 20, 2021 at 4:59 pm Read More »

Steve Sabol, the creative engine behind NFL Films, enters Hall of FameJoe Reedy | Associated Presson July 20, 2021 at 4:47 pm

This year’s “Hard Knocks” series with the Dallas Cowboys will mark the first time one of its teams is in the Hall of Fame game. It is fitting because the creator of the series was enshrined into the hall earlier this year.

“Hard Knocks,” which started 20 years ago, is one of Steve Sabol’s many legacies at NFL Films that continue to live on. Sabol, who was 69 when he died from brain cancer in 2012, is one of three contributors part of the hall’s 2020 Centennial Class, which honors 20 former players, coaches and contributors across all eras of the NFL’s first 100 years.

“I would like to think it’s no coincidence that this is the year that ‘Hard Knocks’ will be at the Hall of Fame. I think Steve is still watching over us,” said NFL Films’ Ken Rodgers, the senior coordinating producer of “Hard Knocks.”

Sabol joins his father Ed, who was enshrined in 2011, as the third father/son duo in Canton. They join Tim and Wellington Mara, owners of the New York Giants, and Art and Dan Rooney, owners of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Sabol was recognized in April by the hall and will be included in the induction festivities on Aug. 7-8.

The Sabols never played or coached a down in the National Football League. But you can’t tell the history of the league without NFL Films’ role in making it the juggernaut it is today.

While it was Ed Sabol who persuaded Pete Rozelle in 1964 that the league needed its own film company to promote and document the game, it was Steve Sabol who was the creative force at NFL Films. He made the game and players appear larger than life through cinematography, slow motion replays, orchestral music and putting microphones on players and coaches.

Rodgers said when Ed Sabol was inducted, Steve saw that as the entire existence of NFL Films, including his career, being recognized. But for Rodgers and those who grew up watching NFL Films shows over the years, Steve Sabol’s induction makes things whole.

“It’s a two-headed monster. Someone creating a company would have just created a company that wouldn’t have done anything without Steve’s creative genius next to it,” he said. “If they didn’t happen together, the NFL wouldn’t be where it is today.

“The business decision to create NFL Films and lead the league into the television space pretty much created sports television. But then the creative style also invented what sports television is creatively today.”

Sabol went to Colorado College, where he was an All-Rocky Mountain Conference running back, and majored in art history. He began working at NFL Films in 1964 as a cinematographer and rose to president before he passed away.

During Sabol’s tenure, NFL Films won more than 100 Emmy Awards. That included 35 won by Sabol in writing, cinematography, editing, directing and producing, the most by anyone.

Sabol was also recognizable in front of the camera. He hosted some of “NFL Films” weekly series during the season, introduced Super Bowl highlight films as well as other company projects which aired frequently on ESPN before NFL Network started in 2003.

ESPN’s Chris Berman said having NFL Films programming served as a springboard to the network eventually airing games starting in 1987.

“NFL Films enabled us to be the destination for pro football fans certainly the first 15-20 years,” Berman said. “It worked hand in hand with our growth because we had the best in pro football, which was Steve Sabol at NFL Films, and I will always believe that.”

If there is one creation that shows Sabol’s philosophy toward film making and NFL Films, it is 1978’s ” Super Sunday with NFL Films,” which shows the entire process of how the Super Bowl 12 highlight film was produced, from camera placement to narrator John Facenda going over the script.

The most interesting part is Sabol discussing how he learned cubism from Picasso’s paintings and that he approaches cinematography from looking at things from different points of view.

” Autumn Ritual, ” which was made in 1986, is a film that follows Sabol’s mandate that “maintain tradition by breaking tradition” because it shows how the NFL fits in with culture and other art forms. It might be the only time when the Reverend Jerry Falwell and rocker Ronnie James Dio appear in the same film and agree on something — their love of football.

“He never stopped loving football,” said Penny Ashman Sabol, Steve Sabol’s widow. “I think that apart from the influence he had on the way we watch football, I think the greatest thing about him is how much people loved him. He helped so many people start and build their careers that his legacy is all the people making great films and television shows.”

“Hard Knocks” ended up being one of Sabol’s proudest accomplishments because it showed how NFL Films adapted with the times. It could still tell a compelling story despite tight deadlines.

Sabol once described “Hard Knocks” as “building an airplane in flight. “We’re taking off, we’re not sure where it’s going to go and we hope we don’t crash. But that’s what makes it exciting.”

The series came along at the dawn of reality shows in 2001, but was more real life than “Survivor” because roster spots were at stake.

“You talk about reality shows – hell, this isn’t anyone getting voted off an island. This is careers at stake in the most highly competitive sports league in the world,” Sabol said in 2009 after the Cincinnati Bengals were selected as the featured team.

“What Hard Knocks proved more than any other program, maybe in our history, is that we are not one type of filmmaking company. We are filmmakers that can adapt to any style and format. On any network,” Rodgers said.

It will be an emotional trip when the “Hard Knocks” crew films at the hall and sees Sabol’s bust, but it will also be a celebration for those who continue to work at NFL Films and were impacted by him.

“Steve making it into the hall is for all of us who watched and worked at NFL films,” Rodgers said, “because Steve was the creative genius behind what we all fell in love with.”

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Steve Sabol, the creative engine behind NFL Films, enters Hall of FameJoe Reedy | Associated Presson July 20, 2021 at 4:47 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears News: A sudden big advantage for Week 1Ryan Heckmanon July 20, 2021 at 4:00 pm

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Chicago Bears News: A sudden big advantage for Week 1Ryan Heckmanon July 20, 2021 at 4:00 pm Read More »

Report details chaos of police response to protests, looting last summerMitch Dudekon July 20, 2021 at 3:07 pm

The Chicago Police Department was unprepared to handle the mass protests, unrest, violence and looting that followed the murder of George Floyd last summer, according to a new report released Tuesday morning.

The report was put together by Maggie Hickey, a former federal prosecutor who’s in charge of overseeing court-ordered reforms to the Chicago Police Department.

The report details how officers rushed to stores and spent their own money to buy zip ties used in mass arrest situations, while other officers rushed to rent vehicles that would allow for proper transportation of cops to areas of potential unrest.

The 464-page report, compiled after numerous interviews with both police and protesters, isn’t even the first report to rip the city’s response to the George Floyd protests.

In February, Joe Ferguson, the city’s inspector general released a highly critical report on the city’s ill-prepared response. CPD also conducted its own “after action” report that laid out failures and how to improve.

Tuesday’s report adds to those.

Among its other findings is that for many officers who were deployed, it wasn’t clear who was in charge or what exactly they should be doing.

One communication failure left a police vehicle on a bridge that was being raised to stem the flow of looters and protesters downtown.

“Even if the city and the CPD had predicted the level of protests and unrest after the death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, the city and the CPD did not have the policies, reporting practices, training, equipment, community engagement, or inter-agency coordination required to respond timely and efficiently,” the report states.

The city, Hickey noted, hadn’t dedicated sufficient resources toward responding to protests and potential unrest since it hosted the NATO summit in 2012.

The report states: “Some CPD leadership told us that they were sent to a location downtown, but there was no one there to provide further instruction when they arrived. In response, some supervisors and officers who responded downtown pushed crowds in various directions, and unsuccessfully, chased people who were looting from store to store. Others said that, without direction, they directed officers with them to not engage with crowds to avoid risking injuries to people in the crowd and themselves. As a result, they had their teams pull away from conflicts.”

It goes on: “Many city and CPD personnel told us that, once they received word of what was occurring downtown, they rushed to work and many officers self-deployed.”

The city’s standard approach of planning and preparing for large protests was inadequate for responding to quickly evolving mass protests that were often fueled by social media. As a result, the city was left “to improvise,” the report states.

Problems deploying the right number of properly equipped officers to the correct locations followed.

“Many officers were deployed without their equipment, including radios, body-worn cameras, or protective gear and also without provisions for their basic needs, such as transportation or access to rest periods, restrooms, food or water,” the report states.

The report said another consequence of being unprepared was the use of excessive force by officers.

“Some officers engaged in various levels of misconduct and excessive force, many instances of which are still under investigation,” it stated.

The report also detailed the response of community members who said they faced excessive force.

“We heard from many community members who expressed new fears, frustrations, confusion, pain, and anger regarding their experiences with officers during protests,” the report states.

“We heard from community members who participated in protests — some for the first time — who said that officers were verbally abusive toward them; pushed and shoved them; tackled them to the ground; pushed them down stairs; pulled their hair; struck them with batons, fists, or other nearby objects; hit them after they were ‘kettled’ with nowhere to go or after being handcuffed; and sprayed them with pepper spray without reason.”

The report hammers home the need for the city to implement reforms laid out in the consent decree, according to Nusrat Choudhury, legal director for the ACLU of Illinois.

“This includes desperately needed changes to ensure police accountability, respect for community members, unbiased policing, and a dramatic reduction in police use of force against people,” he said.

The city has been criticized for its slow pace of cementing consent decree reforms.

Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th), the former Chicago Police officer now chairing the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety, said Tuesday that the monitor’s report covers the same ground already plowed by Ferguson in February.

Taliaferro said CPD already has “learned from its mistakes” and claimed “a lot of right things were done as well” during the two devastating rounds of looting that spread from downtown, River North and Lincoln Park into South and West Side commercial strips.

“We certainly could have had much more hysteria, much more looting and much more harm than we did. So there had to some things that were done right as well. But no one is going to highlight those because it doesn’t sell,” Taliaferro said.

“I’m really tired of it, … Look at how people are perceiving Chicago. That’s because you guys keep throwing this stuff in their throats. … Why isn’t anybody highlighting what we’re doing good as a city? I’m waiting for that. I’ve been waiting for that for years. To keep printing the same thing over and over and over again about the negative in this city — it just dogs people out. It just dogs this city and makes this city look like crap — and it’s not.”

Ferguson’s scathing 124-page report described mistakes at the highest levels of CPD that “failed the public” as well as rank-and-file police officers “left to high-stakes improvisation without adequate supervision or guidance.”

His report also concluded the mayor’s decision to raise the Chicago River bridges and stop CTA trains from entering downtown to keep out looters may have backfired by trapping protesters there.

Ferguson further accused Mayor Lori Lightfoot of rejecting Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s early offer to call out the National Guard to assist overwhelmed and exhausted Chicago police officers. Lightfoot denied the charge as “completely untrue.”

The mayor has said she waited until very late on Saturday, May 30 after widespread looting in the downtown area to request the Guard because, “I’m a kid who grew up in Ohio down the road from Kent State. My earliest memories are very seared by the then-Ohio governor calling in the National Guard to Kent State, and the result was four students dead.”

Lightfoot responded to the inspector general’s report with a claim that CPD has learned from its mistakes.

Taliaferro’s response to the monitor’s report was pretty much the same.

“We have a very smart superintendent. I’m quite sure that he didn’t look at the inspector general’s report and throw it in the trash. He and his command staff are smart enough to look at what needed to be changed and where they fell short,” the chairman said.

“This report is not a blanket disapproval or approval of the city’s and the CPD’s responses to recent protests and unrest,” the report released Tuesday states.

“We believe that the city and the CPD can and must make immediate, deliberate, and transparent efforts — in compliance with the consent decree — to better protect and serve and to be accountable to Chicago’s communities.”

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Report details chaos of police response to protests, looting last summerMitch Dudekon July 20, 2021 at 3:07 pm Read More »

Chicago Academy football coach Anthony Dotson finally finds his placeMike Clarkon July 20, 2021 at 3:21 pm

As a youth intervention specialist and football coach in Chicago Public Schools, Anthony Dotson has heard some hard-luck stories.

But he also can tell a few of his own.

Dotson, who became Chicago Academy’s head coach this spring after two seasons as an assistant, grew up in Bronzeville and played on Troy McAllister’s first team at Phillips as a senior.

He was good enough on the field to earn scholarship offers from Eastern Kentucky and Division II Truman State, but not good enough off it to take advantage of those opportunities.

“In high school, I constantly got into fights,” Dotson said. “I graduated with a 1.9 [grade point average].”

The one college program willing to take a chance on him was Division II Livingstone in Salisbury, North Carolina. But family concerns — his grandmother was battling cancer — and financial issues weighed heavily on his mind.

“I was homesick after that first semester,” Dotson said. “I dropped out and came back home.”

He landed at Division III Rockford for one season before being able to go back to Livingstone to play for one season and earn a bachelor’s in sports management in 2015.

Back in Chicago again, Dotson landed a job at a fitness club. But it didn’t work out and for two months in 2017, he said, he was homeless and sleeping in his car.

Another job at a health food store came and went. But finally his luck turned when he was hired as a security officer in CPS. Five months later, he was promoted to youth intervention specialist. That means working with kids to make sure small problems don’t become big ones.

Two people who have grown to know him well believe it’s the job he was born for.

“Anthony, first of all, has a huge heart,’ said Rahman Muhammad, a deputy chief of detectives with the Chicago Police Department. “His background, his lived experiences — it pretty much guides who he is now. … He’s like a big teddy bear. He’s got his hard exterior, but on the inside, he’s just this kid who wants to be loved and wants to give love in return.”

Chicago Academy principal Lydia Ryan was immediately impressed by Dotson when he applied for the youth intervention job.

“It was really evident, even in the first couple minutes of the interview, that he had a passion for working with young people,” Ryan said. “And we thought, this is a guy who can inspire kids and motivate them, which was something we were missing at the time.”

Dotson has been open with his players about his past struggles, and his stories have resonated with them.

Chicago Academy coach Anthony Dotson runs a linemen drill at football practice.
Chicago Academy coach Anthony Dotson runs a linemen drill at football practice.
Kevin Tanaka/For the Sun-Times

“It definitely inspires me,” quarterback Earnest Davis said. “I’ll talk to him about stuff at home and we can relate to each other about stuff just growing up. Him relating to us as kids and as players and young men, that makes him one of the best coaches I’ve ever had.”

Lineman Anthony Rivas feels the same way.

“He told me his life story,” Rivas said. “It showed me how much I took for granted and how I should start being thankful. I’m grateful for him being here.”

Chicago Academy doesn’t have much of a football tradition. Dotson is the Cougars’ seventh coach since 2006, and a 26-12 win over Foreman this spring was their first home victory since 2015. That season was Chicago Academy’s high-water mark, with its only conference title (in the Inter-City 5) and a program-record seven wins.

But Dotson intends to end the revolving door of coaches and to build a successful program.

“My everyday motivation,” he said, “is to be a better partner, father, son, friend, mentor and coach.”

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Chicago Academy football coach Anthony Dotson finally finds his placeMike Clarkon July 20, 2021 at 3:21 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: ESPN’s future rankings are pure, hot garbageRyan Heckmanon July 20, 2021 at 3:00 pm

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Local Live(s): Making Chicago HomeSun-Times Marketingon July 20, 2021 at 1:36 pm

Make yourself at home!

Join the Chicago Sun-Times’ latest virtual gathering of journalists and strangers you wish you knew on our next season of Local Live(s).

This season will feature artists and speakers from right here in our own backyard, sharing experiences of making Chicago a home away from home.

Our Local Live(s) event will uncover personal stories that will change your perspective, introduce artists that are creating our collective future and pass the mic to voices that don’t often have a stage.

Don’t miss the chance to be part of our next Local Live(s) on August 25 at 7:00 p.m. to hear stories about Making Chicago Home from:

  • Musician, music teacher and former American Idol contestant Ephraim Bugumba. In 1999, at three years old, Bugumba fled the city of Makobola in the Democratic Republic of Congo with his family and eventually emigrated to the United States as a refugee in 2012. His harrowing journey inspires his music today.
  • Sun-Times journalist Ismael Perez. Perez recently moved back to Chicago after spending much of the pandemic in Texas with his family. Perez instantly felt a sense of community when moving into his new apartment in Pilsen.
  • And more!

Local Live(s) is hyper-local, super creative and incredibly fun.

Brought to you by Back Pocket Media and the Chicago Sun-Times.

Wednesday, August 25

7:00 p.m. CT

Online

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Local Live(s): Making Chicago HomeSun-Times Marketingon July 20, 2021 at 1:36 pm Read More »