From left, victims Shermetria Williams, Denice Mathis and Blake Lee. They were among people shot, four fatally, Tuesday morning in Englewood. | Provided photos
The attack is the third mass shooting in Chicago in little over a week and came at the end of a burst of violence that saw more than 25 people shot across the city in 10 hours.
One by one, the family of Denice Mathis walked up to the police tape on the block in Englewood and reached out to each other. Some sobbed, others cursed.
Down the street, inside a two-story house with a gray stone front, lay Mathis and the bodies of two women and a man killed in a shooting that seriously wounded four other people early Tuesday.
Mathis, 35, was a mother of four boys and a girl, and had just taken her children to Six Flags over the weekend.
Also killed was Shermetria Williams, 19, the mother of a 2-year-old daughter. She was set to graduate from Country Club Hills Trade & Tech Center on Tuesday.
The third woman who died in the attack was Ratanya Aryiel Rogers, 28, who lived in Rogers Park, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s officer.
The fourth fatality was Blake Lee, 35, who lived in the home and did odd jobs in the neighborhood, relatives said. He had recently lost his mother to diabetes and grandmother to several illnesses, including a bad heart.
The attack is the third mass shooting in Chicago in a little over a week and came at the end of a burst of violence that saw more than 25 people shot across the city in 10 hours.
The attack prompted Mayor Lori Lightfoot to say Chicago has joined a “club of cities to which no one wants to belong: cities with mass shootings.”
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesChicago police officials investigate inside a house in the 6200 block of South Morgan, where eight people were shot, four fatally, during an argument inside the Englewood building, Tuesday afternoon, June 15, 2021.
Lightfoot — as she repeatedly has done — decried lack of federal action aimed at “eliminating opportunity for criminals, for children, to get access to illegal guns so that petty disputes turn into mass shooting events, as we’ve seen over and over and over again.”
The Rev. Donovan Price, who regularly goes to shooting scenes to provide support for gun violence victims and their loved ones, said he’s never seen anything like the last 10 days in the more than five years he’s worked as a street pastor.
“This is the worst ever,” said Price, whose voice quivered at times as he spoke of Tuesday’s tragedy. “It’s worse now than it’s ever been. It’s devastating.”
Chicago police released few details of how the eight people were shot but said it occurred when an argument broke out inside the home.
Four of the victims were pronounced dead at the scene shortly before 6 a.m., and four others were taken to hospitals, at least two of them in critical condition. A 2-year-old girl in the home at the time was taken to Comer Children’s Hospital for observation. She was not shot.
A witness told police there were two volleys of gunshots inside the home, hours apart.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesA woman crying, “That’s my baby! That’s my baby!” is escorted by community activists, including Andrew Holmes (left), to a vehicle after she tried to cross police tape at West 63rd Street and South Morgan Street, Tuesday morning, June 15, 2021. Four people were shot and killed inside a home in the 6200 block of South Morgan in an incident that left four others wounded.
The first was around 2 a.m., when the ShotSpotter system alerted police to gunfire near the Morgan address, according to Police Supt. David Brown. He did not say if police responded to the alert.
The witness heard shots again around 5 a.m., around the time officers arrived to find the victims. Police recovered shell casings inside the house and a large capacity “drum magazine.”
There was no sign of forced entry, Brown said. At least one of the victims lived at the address, a barber who cut hair out of the house.
Brown did not elaborate on the relationships of the victims and the shooter, or what the argument was about.
Brown said the victims taken to hospitals had not yet been interviewed by detectives, and the investigation still was “very preliminary.”
“All we know about this residence is there’s been several calls there for disturbances,” Brown told reporters. “Overall, the block where this residence is located is fairly quiet, not much activity going on that requires a police response.”
As officers worked the scene into the late morning, a crowd of distraught relatives and neighbors gathered along the police tape blocking off Morgan Street.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesChicago police keep watch and crime scene tape hangs outside a house in the 6200 block of South Morgan, where eight people were shot, four fatally, inside the Englewood building, Tuesday afternoon, June 15, 2021.
Mathis’ family said she was a devoted mother. “She was a good person — a free-spirited person,” said a cousin, Vickie Smith. “She loved her family.”
Mathis lived on the South Side, but the family didn’t know what brought her to the gathering on South Morgan.
A man who said he was Mathis’ brother said his sister had been to the house many times before. “She was a good girl — none of these knuckleheads,” the brother said.
Demetrius Williams said he was at home in Maywood, putting on a shirt and tie for his daughter Shermetria’s graduation when he heard she had been killed.
“This is unbelievable — a massacre,” said Williams, struggling to compose his thoughts as officers took down the crime tape around the Englewood house. “Why? Why did this have to happen?”
Williams still held the ticket for his daughter’s graduation. Back home were red roses and balloons that said, “Congratulations.”
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesA woman — identifying herself as a family member of one of the women who was killed — receives a hug from a supporter outside the crime scene tape at West 63rd Street and South Morgan Street, Tuesday morning, June 15, 2021.
“All she wanted to do was take care of her daughter and be successful in life,” the father said. “She meant the world to me. That was my baby girl.”
Also standing and waiting for answers outside the police tape was Raheem Hall, who grew up in Englewood and always had words of caution for his nephew, Blake Lee.
“I told him just to be careful out here. Stay away from the wrong crowd,” Hall said.
Blake lived in the house where the attack occurred. “He was a good guy,” said Hall, who now lives in Indiana. “He did no harm to no one. He was just trying to live his life as an ordinary guy.”
“He wasn’t really a guy that started trouble or anything like that, if anything, he’d try to diffuse a situation… he just got caught up in a tragic moment,” Hall said.
Blake had had a hard life, his uncle said, but he was also enjoying things recently, having traveled to Miami on vacation, his uncle said.
Price, founder and executive director of solutions and resources|Street Pastors, spent most of the morning on the Morgan block, praying over the victims and their families as well as comforting people who lived in the area.
He said he spoke to a young boy who said his mother was one of the victims who died. “The whole thing is bad. There’s a lot of family,” Price said. “This is a terrible situation and a lasting and damaging situation for the South Side [and] for the city.”
Similar scenes played out through the day at the hospitals where the wounded were taken.
A group of about 10 people waited outside the University of Chicago Hospital, where a 25-year-old woman was taken in critical condition after being shot on Morgan.
A 45-year-old man said his daughter remained in surgery as of 12:45 p.m. The man said his daughter worked at Lawrence’s Fish & Shrimp.
After he walked away, several women began to weep. One woman dropped to the ground and buried her face in her hands.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesA crew removes one of four bodies from a house in the 6200 block of South Morgan after they were all shot to death when an argument broke inside the Englewood building, Tuesday afternoon, June 15, 2021. Four other people were wounded in the shooting.
One person wrapped her arms around another and rubbed their back to comfort them as they stood against a chain-linked fence and faced the emergency room entrance.
“She got shot in the head,” another person sobbed on the phone as they walked away.
Outside Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, relatives said the man who lived in the home, James Tolbert, 41, was “alert and coherent.”
Tolbert operated a barbershop from his home after COVID-19 restrictions closed down the shop where he worked. The 2-year-old girl taken to Comer for observation is his daughter, according to Tolbert’s sister, Michelle Tolbert.
Waiting outside the emergency room entrance, Michelle Tolbert said she learned her brother had been shot from a Facebook post and feared the worst.
“There were a lot of people putting up ‘RIP’ posts, so I was worried,” she said.
Hospital staff would not let her up to her brother’s room but said Tolbert no longer was in critical condition. “They told me he’s awake, he’s responsive.”
Michelle Tolbert said her brother had a jovial “barbershop” personality and had studied to be an EMT before going to barber college.
“He’s a good person,” she said. “He definitely didn’t deserve this.”
The attack is the third mass shooting in Chicago in little over a week and came just hours after gunfire erupted at a party in the Back of the Yards neighborhood on the South Side, killing a man and wounding two women.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesPeople watch as a crew removes four bodies from a house in the 6200 block of South Morgan after they were all shot to death Tuesday when an argument broke inside the Englewood building, according to police. Four other people were wounded in the shooting.
The weekend before, six men and two women were wounded when someone in a silver car opened fire in a shooting in the 8900 block of South Cottage Grove Avenue in the Burnside neighborhood.
There have been 390 homicides in Cook County so far this year, according to the medical examiner’s office, nearly 300 of them in Chicago. This time last year, the county had recorded 342.
Lightfoot blamed the violence on the lack of national laws that would curb the flow of illegal guns.
“When gun [laws] are so porous that they can come across our borders with such ease, as we see every single day in Chicago, we know that we have to have a multi-jurisdictional, national solution to this horrible plague of gun violence,” she said. “And that starts with eliminating opportunity for criminals, for children to get access to illegal guns so that petty disputes turn into mass shooting events, as we’ve seen over and over and over again—not just this year, but every year.”
Lightfoot bristled when asked how the steady stream of mass shootings might impact her efforts to reopen the city and encourage Chicagoans to come downtown to dine and shop and patronize the stores and restaurants in their own neighborhoods.
She noted that the Englewood shooting happened “inside a single residence” — not out on the street or in a large outdoor gathering.
“The reality is, our city is safe,” the mayor said. “And I stand by that. We have done yeoman’s work over the course of a very difficult year where every major city—New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington D.C., Atlanta and on and on the list goes—has seen similar surge in violence.”
Pressed about the perception of safety, she said, “What I’m concerned about is the fact that people lost their lives this morning. I’m concerned about the fact that there are people who are dead in an act of violence that makes no sense to me.”
Asked whether she believes Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is doing a good job prosecuting gun offenders, Lightfoot pointed to what one of the state’s attorney’s top aides said about the Chicago Police Department during a recent webinar for reporters.
“The conclusion of her policy person was that the Chicago Police Department is arresting the wrong people who possess guns. I fundamentally disagree with that,” she said. “We are a city that’s awash in illegal guns. Those illegal guns cause deep pain and injury and death.”
Lil’ Ed Williams (from left), Billy Branch, Bruce Iglauer and Toronzo Cannon chat in the office of Alligator Records in Edgewater. | Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times
The Edgewater-based record label has a roster of blues legends including Koko Taylor, Lil’ Ed Williams, Shemekia Copeland and former CTA bus driver Toronzo Cannon, among many others.
Bruce Iglauer, founder and president of independent Blues record label Alligator Records, says he initially came to Chicago in 1966 as a “blues pilgrim” who wanted to check out the University of Chicago Folk Festival.
Decades later, ahead of Mayor Lori Lightfoot declaring June 18 as “Alligator Records Day” in Chicago, Iglauer is looking back at the nuances of starting an influential record label in a blues mecca.
“I’ve recorded blues artists all over the country, but I started here in Chicago because this is still the home of the blues in this country,” said Iglauer, a Wyoming, Ohio, native who founded Alligator Records in 1971. “This is still the city with more active blues musicians and more active blues clubs than any other. I call myself a blues pilgrim because I came here for the blues, and I could have ran this label from Cincinnati; it wouldn’t have been the same label. It feels great.”
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesBruce Iglauer, founder and head of the independent blues record label Alligator Records, reads a proclamation from Mayor Lori Lightfoot, declaring June 18 “Alligator Records Day” throughout the city of Chicago, in his office in Edgewater.
Iglauer and Alligator Records won’t rest on their laurels for long. In fact, the label’s legendary roster of blues artists — many of them directly influenced by one another, including Hound Dog Taylor, Koko Taylor, Shemekia Copeland, Nick Moss, Lil’ Ed Williams (leader of Lil’ Ed & The Blues Imperials), Toronzo Cannon, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, and Selwyn Birchwood — are featured on the Edgewater-based label’s anniversary release, “Alligator Records: 50 Years Of Genuine Houserockin’ Music,” which be available June 18 on LP and three-disc CD set.
“When I started I had $2,500 — that’s all I had to invest,” said Iglauer. “So I made Hound Dog Taylor’s first record in eight hours in the studio, and we mixed it as we went because I couldn’t afford multitrack recording and mixing later. We just mixed it directly to track on the fly.”
The label’s name, Iglauer says, partly stems from the inability of some folks to pronounce his last name. And, over time, as he signed acts to the label, Iglauer says he got to know his artists through their music.
“Alligator was my nickname, and it comes from this funny habit I have of listening to music and unconsciously, not knowing I’m doing it, playing drum parts by clicking my teeth together,” said Iglauer. “I’ve got this weird last name — Iglauer — which nobody can spell or pronounce. And then beyond that, alligators come from the South; blues, the music I love, is all Southern-rooted.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesBruce Iglauer, founder and head of the independent blues record label Alligator Records, is photographed in his office earlier this month.
“[The blues] is grown-up music, for sure. Toronzo was raised by his grandparents who were blues fans. His mom was a teenager when he was born and she wasn’t ready to be raising kids. Lil’ Ed is a nephew of — in my world — a famous Chicago musician named J.B. Hutto who recorded starting in the 1950s and recorded into the early ’80s.”
Billy Branch, a singer and harmonica player, says Alligator Records emerged in an era when the music and its record companies were abundant. He calls the label “the last man standing.”
“There were quite a few Chicago labels, and Bruce has maintained a catalog of some of the greatest artists that ever lived,” said Branch, who first recorded music for the label in 1978. “I’m happy to say I was a part of maybe a dozen or more different Alligator recordings.”
Alligator RecordsAlligator Records artists Koko Taylor (from left), Son Seals and Lonnie Brooks are shown in an undated photo. The three artists are among the blues legends featured on the Chicago label’s roster.
After garnering a stockpile of awards, fame and prestige, Alligator’s roster in recent years has produced music with a social justice aspect.
For instance, the aforementioned Cannon, a retired CTA bus driver and guitarist, has a song named “Insurance,” which details the horrors of not being able to afford health insurance, and Nick Moss’ “Sanctified, Holy And Hateful” is about how religion is utilized to fuel hate.
Alligator’s history and influence has made an impact on blues artists everywhere — and that bears fruit in the label’s current roster.
Cannon says he was influenced by several Alligator artists, not knowing they were all on the same label.
“When I first started practicing, I’d look to the famous guys to learn from,” said Cannon. “I didn’t know there was an Alligator Records. I didn’t have any concept of record companies. I was just buying stuff that sounds good.”
Ingram, a guitarist, joined Alligator in 2019. He says it’s not only an honor to be associated with blues heavyweights, he revels in carrying on the tradition.
“It’s humbling for me. I owe a big, big chunk of my career to the blues greats,” said Ingram, a Mississippi resident. “It’s awesome to be a part of something that’s stamped down in history, and can never be erased. I’m very grateful for the opportunity I’ve been given.”
Rapper Lil Durk’s brother was shot and killed outside Club O in suburban Harvey. | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times, Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times
After a warrant was issued for his arrest, Devinair English denied the police account of what took place the night Lil Durk’s brother, Dontay “DThang” Banks, was shot dead.
An arrest warrant was issued Tuesday for a south suburban man who allegedly shot a police officer during a chaotic scene outside a Harvey strip club earlier this month in which rapper Lil Durk’s brother was killed.
Devinair English, 23, of Maywood, is wanted for aggravated battery to a peace officer and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon in connection to the June 6 shooting outside Club O, 17038 S. Halsted St., according to court records and the Cook County state’s attorney’s office.
English was an associate of fledgling rapper Dontay “DThang” Banks, who was fatally wounded in a separate shooting that happened around the same time in the club’s parking lot. Banks is the brother of local rap superstar Lil Durk, whose real name is Durk Banks.
No charges have been filed in English’s case or Banks’ killing, a spokeswoman for the state’s attorney’s office said.
‘Multiple gunshots were ringing out’
Reached by phone Tuesday, English was unaware that a warrant had been issued for his alleged role in the officer’s shooting. “None of that’s true,” he said after learning of the allegations.
As the club was closing that night, a police officer who was stationed outside the club “for crowd control” reported that “gunfire erupted throughout the lot,” according to Harvey police records obtained by the Sun-Times.
“Multiple gunshots were ringing out, as patrons fled in all directions,” according to a police report, which noted that security guards were also present.
Around the same time, English was allegedly “involved in a physical altercation” with a pair of responding officers when one of the cops noticed he had a handgun and wrestled it away, police records show. In the process, the officer was shot in the left thigh, and English took off. The officer was listed in good condition, according to a Harvey spokeswoman.
The other officer later tried to unjam the weapon that was taken, at which point a single spent round was “expelled from the chamber,” police records show.
English said he was merely giving the gun to his cousin, who he said has a license to carry it publicly.
“We pulled the car around and in the midst of me hopping out and trying to give my cousin his firearm, the police grabbed me,” he said.
In April, English pleaded guilty to a drug charge out of Chicago and was sentenced to two years probation, court records show.
English said he’s unsure what exactly happened elsewhere in the parking lot, though he noted that “an argument broke out” and others started shooting as he was wrestling with the officers.
A police report notes that “firearms began discharging by unknown subjects at the southeast corner of the building, with return gunfire by unknown subjects at the northeast corner of the building.”
Officers ultimately found Banks near an SUV that was damaged by gunfire, police records show. Multiple shell casings were found nearby.
“The individual had an unruly crowd surrounding him,” a police report states. “A large puddle of blood was near his head [and] neck area.”
Banks, who lived in Chicago’s Gresham neighborhood, suffered multiple gunshot wounds. Some of his associates took him to South Suburban Hospital in Hazel Crest, where he died, according to police records and the Cook County medical examiner’s office.
Herschel Rush, an attorney for Banks’ family, declined comment.
Banks’ funeral service was held last week.
Lil Durk & his family held the funeral service for DThang yesterday. Rest in paradise to a real one pic.twitter.com/tjYhBytQ8H
After the shootings, four different types of shell casings littered the parking lot and “bloodlike stains” covered the pavement in multiple locations, police records show.
At least one person was taken for questioning, police records show. While in custody, that person said he did marketing work for Banks and attempted to leave the scene in the SUV because he was “emotional” about the shooting.
He also told investigators that English was among a group that accompanied Banks to the strip club that night, an account English confirmed.
The person added that Banks got into an argument with an unknown male who shot him and fled the scene, records show. His description of the shooter broadly matched a description security personnel provided of one of the individuals involved in the gunfight.
Police were investigating if another fatal shooting hours later was possible retaliation.
Contributing: David Struett
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times, Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-TimesClub O is in Harvey, Ill.
According to MLB’s new guidelines, the penalty for foreign substances being found on a player’s person will result in a 10-game suspension.
NEW YORK – After weeks of hearing about “sticky stuff” around the game, pitchers have found themselves in different sticky situations with MLB’s announcement of the banning and strict enforcement of foreign substances.
In a memo sent by MLB on Tuesday, the league announced tacky substances including the popular products like Spider Tack, Pelican Grip. The mixture of sunscreen and rosin, which has been used in the game for decades, was also included on the list of banned substances.
Cubs pitchers had a meeting before Tuesday’s game against the Mets to discuss the different changes, which will begin to be enforced on June 21, as the team and the league tries to navigate the new rules.
“I think we were all kind of anticipating and understanding that something was going to come out,” pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said. We’re just waiting for it to become official and then talk through what we need to do moving forward.”
The league cracking down on foreign substances comes amid seemingly nightly evidence of pitchers around the league using different substances with some using for increased grip while others do it to increase their spin rate and RPM.
According to Tuesday’s memo, the penalty for foreign substances being found on a player’s person will result in a 10-game suspension.
There has been clear frustrations from players, coaches and managers around the league as umpires have been enforcing substance more over the last several weeks as the conversation around foreign substances had begun to grow.
“Going into this year, it would have been nice to have a clear cut path for a lot of guys,” starter Zach Davies said. “But now, you’re having to U-turn in the middle of the season and try and figure things out. That’s frustrating. It’s annoying to have to talk about when it all could have been settled in spring training and guys aren’t worrying about trying to win ballgames.
“You have to answer more questions now that don’t really pertain to you, just because you’re part of the game. Over the last few years, we could have talked about baseball changing every year, but that’s not really brought up.”
Davies’ point about baseball’s changing is something that’s one the radar on pitchers and coaches around the league with pitchers describing the inconsistency in baseballs not only from ballpark to ballpark, but also within a start – varying from the seams on the ball to the slick and chalky surface – leading to a much greater emphasis on grip.
In a season where the league has seen hit batters per game skyrocket, that trend might continue to trend in the wrong direction now as pitchers try to navigate slick baseballs without anything to help grip.
“I would say that we have to put an emphasis on making sure that the baseball is uniform,” manager David Ross said. “Everywhere you go, you definitely hear pitchers talking about when [they] go on the road at this place, the balls are a little more chalky than in that place whether that has to do with climate or humidity, lack of humidity, or how somebody rubs them, there’s so many variables in that and I think we just have to get back to finding some form with that.”
While there has been chagrin in regards to how the league has decided to suddenly enforce banned substances, one thing many in the game have agreed on is the need to do something about the abuse of sticky substances to gain an advantage.
The hope is that there is a solution that addresses those issues in the near future.
“I don’t know if there’s another way to do it, though,” Hottovy said. “You almost have to hit the reset button and then kind of figure out from there what you want to do as a league. I think the minute you start giving exceptions to one thing, you’re going to have people kind of complain about other things.
“I think that’s the way you have to handle it and then we as an industry have to adjust and I think if that causes guys to have to back off their stuff to throw strikes, that’s pitching. That’s part of the game. Will it affect people? Absolutely. But again, I think to control the broader scheme, I think you have to start with a clean slate.”
Rendering of the Boys & Girls Club (left) proposed to be built on West Chicago Avenue in Garfield Park, on the campus of city’s planned new police and fire training facility (right). | City of Chicago
We support the plan in concept. It is bold, even radical. But it will have to be done right.
It comes as no surprise that anti-cop activists are up in arms about a controversial plan to build a Boys & Girls Club adjacent to a new police and fire training academy in Garfield Park.
The opposition comes largely from the #NoCopAcademy movement, which remains adamantly opposed to the training academy and would prefer that the city “defund” its police force and spend that money, tens of millions of dollars each year, elsewhere.
The new Boys & Girls Club, in their view, would be nothing but a “slap in the face” to Black youth who deeply mistrust our city’s police force.
“Sugar-coating a plan that is due to fail,” activist and frequent mayoral critic Ja’Mal Green said. “This whole campus should be a youth center where young people can grow and thrive. Instead, it’s a police academy.”
“Police officers don’t make Black children feel safe,” Destiny Harris, a youth organizer for the #NoCopAcademy campaign, said. “How can you expect Black and Brown children to come into this space and feel comfortable?”
Let’s be clear: We get it. Chicago indeed has a long and terrible history of police abuse and misconduct. This has left large segments of Black Chicago deeply, and rightfully, suspicious of the police and convinced that cops patrol their communities to harass and arrest, not to serve and protect.
Chicago must do all in its powers to change that dynamic. Profound reform of the police department is necessary. But “defunding” is not likely what most Chicagoans, including Black Chicagoans, are aiming for, as one national poll after another has shown. A new MacArthur Foundation/Harris Poll on public safety found that 58% of Chicagoans oppose the movement to defund police. National polls have similar findings, including a March USA Today/Ipsos poll that found fewer than one in five Americans — and just 28% of Black Americans — support the defunding movement.
Let’s be clear on this, too: Building a new Boys & Girls Club in close proximity to a police training academy is in itself a radical idea. One policing reform expert we spoke with could not think of another city that has attempted anything similar as part of policing reform.
We support the plan in concept. But to work, it will have to be done right.
Safe and welcomed
Young people must feel safe and welcomed, not under surveillance, when they show up for after-school programs and basketball games. Police cadets must be taught to interact positively with youth and the rest of the surrounding West Side community. Programs to facilitate interaction will be needed.
It will be hard to break down decades-old barriers of mistrust, but we believe Chicago has the capacity to make this proposal work. We see, as well, a powerful opportunity to bring a much-needed resource to a West Side neighborhood that has been starved for such amenities for far too long.
Ask any true expert in the field of big city policing: The best police departments are, in the most positive ways, part of the fabric of their communities.
“I reject the notion that kids and police should be nowhere near each other,” policing expert Lorenzo Boyd of the University of New Haven, told us. “They should be around each other, and this brings them in proximity with one another.”
“I want police to understand the lived experience of the kids in the neighborhood,” Boyd added, explaining that it’s something he stresses in his training sessions with officers around the country. “And the more kids, and adults, get to know officers in a non-law enforcement way, the better. If it works, it can be great.”
Taking to heart 2017 police reform report
The driving force behind our views on this matter are the findings and recommendations of the U.S. Justice Department’s landmark 2017 report on the Chicago Police Department. The report pulled no punches as to the disgraceful state of policing in Chicago, and a federal court-monitored consent decree for reform embraced the report’s specific recommendations.
The Justice Department report concluded that inadequate training, carried out in an outdated and run-down facility, is a huge obstacle to true reform of CPD. State-of-the-art training is essential, but virtually impossible to achieve without better facilities. That is why we have supported construction of the new facility despite criticisms that it is somehow an undeserved “gift” to the police.
The DOJ also concluded that a more cooperative, less adversarial relationship between cops and citizens is essential. Without better relations, effective policing is impossible. Citizens will never feel safe.
We’re optimistic that, so far, the city is on the right track. As Planning and Development Commissioner Maurice Cox told us, the Boys & Girls Club and the city ultimately decided to pursue the idea, keeping in mind Chicago’s fraught history of policing.
“We asked ourselves, could we do something tangible to build a bridge between youth and public safety by pairing them next to each other?” Cox said. “There was a lot of concern about reopening old wounds.”
Young people involved in planning
Getting young people engaged in the planning process was important and essential, Cox told us. “We didn’t want advocates for youth in the room,” he said. “We wanted youth themselves in the room.”
That group of about 30 young people — recruited from schools, other Boys & Girls Clubs, and elsewhere — have been involved in the planning since last November. And from the city’s short list of prospective lead architects, the group selected the winner, Latent Design, a firm founded by Black architect Katharine Darnstadt.
The group of young people also weighed in on the design of the club itself, which is to look out onto a public plaza intended to encourage mingling and interaction among the police, young people and community visitors.
“It’s an important conversation that activists are trying to have,” Cox said. “But once the conversation dies down, we have to think about what we’re going to leave, and whether we’ve shaped and changed things for the better.”
Smoke billows from an industrial fire at Chemtool Monday in Rockton. The fire at the chemical plant, which produces industrial grease and fluids, prompted evacuations. | Scott Olson, Getty
State environmental officials are asking for documents to determine the cause of Monday’s blast and possible toxic releases.
State environmental officials are asking Attorney General Kwame Raoul to potentially bring charges against the company Chemtool after its chemical plant near Rockford exploded earlier this week and continued to burn Tuesday.
Raoul should “pursue legal action and require Chemtool to immediately stop the release” of pollution, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency said.
The legal move was announced as firefighters continued to battle a blaze that began with a Monday morning explosion in the village of Rockton. Dozens of employees escaped just before the blast, residents were evacuated and a large cloud of black smoke was still rising from the site Tuesday as the fire raged.
The state EPA also wants Raul’s office to force the company to turn over records that may determine “the cause of the fire and an estimate of the nature and amount of any emissions of sulfuric acid mist, particulate matter and other air contaminants as a result of the fire.”
Authorities evacuated residents within a one-mile radius and told people as far away as 3 miles from the now-destroyed facility to wear a mask for protection. Federal officials are testing the air.
Trump weakened environmental protections
Also on Tuesday, safety advocacy groups said they are hopeful that a new review being led by the Biden Administration may result in strengthening laws in hopes of preventing the type of disaster like the one in Rockton.
Critics say weak federal oversight exacerbated by relaxed regulation under Donald Trump’s Administration contributes to such accidents.
The Rockton plant makes lubricating greases and industrial fluids but it’s unclear exactly what caused the fire or what’s being emitted, a concern of environmentalists who say government oversight of the chemical industry is too lax.
“You have no idea what’s in the air,” said Jane Williams, a Sierra Club activist in California who tracks chemical disasters nationally. The firefighters at the scene “are completely in the dark to what they are being exposed to, which is so wrong.”
Williams and others hope that a review in Washington that could take years will lead to more preventative measures taken by government and companies. For its part, Lubrizol, the company that owns the plant, says it has operated safely since 2012 after it bought Chemtool. Lubrizol is owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.
APA black smoke cloud from the massive industrial fire at Chemtool on Prairie Hill Road in Rockton billows over a house on S. Bluff Road Monday, June 14, 2021, in South Beloit, Ill.
“We’re just really heartbroken by what happened and its impact on the community in particular,” Bill Snyder, vice president of operations for Lubrizol, said at a press conference Tuesday.
The accident follows the start of a review by federal environmental officials to evaluate safeguards at chemical plants. The day Joe Biden took the White House Jan. 20, he signed an executive order to strengthen chemical plant oversight following Trump Administration directives to relax rules. At the urging of the chemicals industry, the EPA under Trump worked to undo safeguards put in place just before he took office. Those rollbacks prompted a lawsuit against the Trump Whitehouse by Illinois and 14 other states as well as legal challenges from national environmental organizations.
Limited oversight
Even if Trump had not acted to scale back regulations, the Rockton plant still had limited oversight. Inspections are conducted by the Illinois EPA but it’s unclear how often and records are not easily publicly accessible. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspects facilities when there is a complaint and has done so three times since 2012. In 2013, the company paid one fine of $4,900 after OSHA cited it for failing to make sure dangerous machinery doesn’t start up and potentially injure workers. Another OSHA inspection was opened last month after an unspecified complaint, records show.
More than 30 years ago, jarred by a deadly gas-leak accident that killed thousands in Bhopal, India, Congress passed a law to strengthen the government’s hand in preventing chemical disasters. The Chemical Safety Board was created as part of that law passed in 1990 and the investigative body has been making recommendations for years, advocates say. But tougher rules weren’t put in place until the very end of Barack Obama’s presidency.
The Obama rules drew a rebuke from the American Chemistry Council, the industry trade group that later praised Trump’s rollback of the guidelines.
“Trump reversed all prevention measures,” said Emma Cheuse, a lawyer for the group Earthjustice. “The program right now is weak.”
Brett Chase’s reporting on the environment and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.
Mike Domanus caught his personal-best walleye from the Chain O’Lakes. | Provided
Perch season reopening Wednesday on Illinois’ Lake Michigan waters, Illinois’ Free Fishing Days beginning Friday and reports and photos coming from all around Chicago fishing are in this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report.
Perch season reopens Wednesday, June 16, on the Illinois waters of Lake Michigan, Illinois Free Fishing Days (Friday-Monday, June 18-21) and general summer fishing lead this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report; also frog season opens today, June 15, in Illinois.
Mike Domanus emailed the photo at the top of his PB walleye and this:
Got this 28 inch walleye on Lake Marie and 31 inch Northern on Spring Lake on the chain o lakes
Summer traffic be damned, the Chain is a special place.
ILLINOIS PERCH
Perch fishing in the Illinois waters of Lake Michigan reopens Wednesday, June 16. I plan to hop around the lakefront, hopefully some will be around.
Park Bait will be opening at 4 a.m., as of tomorrow, June 16, for early anglers. Henry’s Sports and Bait will also be adjusting hours. I will update when I know more.
ILLINOIS FREE FISHING DAYS
Free fishing days are Friday, June 18, to Monday, June 21. No licenses or stamps are required. All other regulations apply.
ILLINOIS FROG SEASON
Illinois’ bullfrog (only) season opens today, June 15, and runs through Oct. 15.
Here is the word from the Illinois Department of Illinois:
FROGS (Bullfrogs Only) Methods of Taking and Capture A sport fishing license is required to harvest bullfrogs. Bullfrogs may be taken by hook and line, gig, pitchfork, spear, bow and arrow, hand, or landing net.
No person shall harvest bullfrogs or any other reptile or amphibian by commercial fishing devices, including, hoop nets, traps or seines or by the use of firearms, air guns or gas guns or during bowfishing tournaments.
All other species of unprotected reptiles and amphibians (excluding common snapping turtles and bullfrogs) may only be taken by hand. This shall not restrict the use of legally taken reptiles or amphibians as bait by sport fishermen.
Any captured reptiles or amphibians which are not to be retained in the possession of the captor shall be immediately released at the site of capture, unless taken with a lethal method (such as bow and arrow, gig, spear, pitchfork) which does not permit “release with no harm”. All such taken common snapping turtles and bullfrogs must be kept and counted in the daily harvest. No culling of such taken species is permitted. No person shall harvest or possess any species of reptile or amphibian listed as endangered or threatened in Illinois (17 Ill. Adm. Code 1010 except as provided by 17 Ill. Adm. Code 1070).
Season Bullfrogs may be taken only between June 15 and October 15, both dates inclusive. 6 7
Daily Harvest and Possession Limits The daily Harvest limit for bullfrogs is 8 with a possession limit of 16. For indigenous amphibian and reptile taxon, which may only be taken by hand, (excluding common snapping turtles and bullfrogs) the possession limit is 8 collectively with no more than 4 per taxa
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
Cook County commissioner Kevin Morrison holds a fishing derby Saturday, June 19, at Busse Lake from 9 a.m to noon. Must preregister; click here to register and for more information.
ProvidedSam Oaks caught a big largemouth bass around Wilmington.
On Thursday, Sam Oaks emailed the photo above and this:
Hey Dale,
I am a local guy from Chicago, graduated from Mount Carmel High School a couple years ago. I read your fishing reports every morning and I finally think I caught one that can be featured in your report. I am a big fan and love to see and read the fishing section in the Chicago Suntimes on a daily basis. Anyways to get to the thing that really matters, I was up in Wilmington, IL today with my father and caught the biggest bass of my life. It was a great fight and easily the funnest fifteen minutes fishing I ever had before. Thank you for your time and consideration!
Big Suntimes Outdoors Fan,
Sam Oaks
Good to have a former Caravan basketball player reach out. (And be a big outdoors fan.)
He added:
Thanks for the response back! It was at my father’s place at Lakepoint Club Resort on a lake in Wilmington, IL. I used a top water chug bar pop bar to catch it. Thanks again!
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported good largemouth at Jericho Lake on goldfish.
ProvidedRico Cantu with a good largemouth bass.
Rico Cantu emailed the photo above and this:
Fish on Dale, caught on wacky worm.
Rico Cantu
Lockport IL
Pete Lamar emailed:
Hi Dale,
Fishing slowed for me this week, both in terms of numbers and of size. Just some small bluegills and bass on a forest preserve pond.
BRAIDWOOD LAKE
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview.
CHAIN O’LAKES AREA
See Mike Domanus’ PB walleye at the top of this post.
ProvidedBrad Janis sent a photo of walleye on the Chain O’Lakes.
Brad Janis emailed the photo above and this over the weekend:
Fox chain was on fire today….. water temp as high as 86
I think he meant the fishing was good, but I have been on the Chain when it was hot enough to feel like it was on fire.
Tucker at Triangle Sports and Marine in Antioch said catfish are going, best on stinkbait; flatheads are good, too, some on cutbait; bluegill just starting to get on beds right; largemouth moving from channels to main lake; white bass are running here and there; main lake docks are holding walleye.
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.
Fishing has been phenomenal. The warm weather has got two definite bites going. The bluegill fishing on the weedline has been awesome. They are 6-8 ft down in 12-14 ft of water. If you find the weedline, the fish are there. The spawning bluegills are also in 5-6 ft of water on hard sand bottom. Make sure you have enough bait.
Walleye fishing has been pretty good. The best success has come on jigs fished in 15 ft of water with leeches. Look for the fish by the Yacht Club, Willow Point, and by Browns Channel. Most of the fish are 16-17 inches. It’s a bummer that the legal limit is 18 inches, but their growing! Last week I tried trolling crank baits and only caught a couple. I prefer deep diving Bandit Walleye minnows or Bandit 300 series crankbaits. White pearl is my favorite color.
Largemouth bass can be caught in a multitude of ways. The slop bite, the deep weedline bite or the shallow Senko bite have all been producing fish. I haven’t been targeting them due to the fact that most of my clients were interested in northern last week. Sunday afternoon I was using the new Arkie U bolt Finesse jig tipped with the Yum finesse worm, green pumpkin and caught a few fish. All were legal. Had a real problem hooking the fish, I had several that got off. The Senko/All Terrain Stik bite is still very good by Lake Lawn Lodge and by the west end. The best depth was 6-7 ft. The finesse jig bite was in 15-18 ft. and the slop bite is 2-3 ft by the boat launch and by the outlet.
Northern Pike has been really good with the consistent weather. I’ve been fluctuating depth from 17-25 ft. Lindy rigged suckers are the only way to go. The best location is by the gray condos, the Yacht Club Point and by Willow Point. The only problem I’ve had is with the warm water and the cold bait shop suckers is keeping the bait alive. I use the 1/0 hook and a ¾ oz Lindy sinker. I fished about 1 ft off bottom.
Crappies are on the weedline in 12-16 ft of water. I’ve been using the mini mites with a 1/32 oz jig and small 3/0 split shot hooked about 6-8 inches above the lure. Most of the fish I’ve been catching are between 6 and 7 inches. You really need to sort to catch a limit of 10 inch fish. There’s no problem catching a crappie every other cast. Remember, if you want to keep crappies, you should bring some ice since with the warm water temperature they are very soft if you put them in the live well.
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.
Provided by Dicky’s Bait ShopFox River flathead catfish.
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery emailed the photo above and reported some good catfish and flatheads, including 22-pound flathead in Oswego over the weekend on a goldfish; river remains very low, so most are targeting pools and pockets.
Pete Lamar emailed:
Hi Dale,
Fishing slowed for me this week, both in terms of numbers and of size. . . .
As far as the Fox, it was as low as I’ve ever seen it when I drove over it Friday afternoon (we got a lot of rain on Saturday afternoon, but it was very isolated; I’m not sure how it affected nearby streams and the Fox). I fished a tributary with a good amount of spring flow in the hopes that it would be cooler than the Fox. It was, but it too was very low. Just a few sunfish and small smallmouths were caught. The birding was a little better: an adult bald eagle flew right over me and a kingfisher was patrolling up and down the stream.
GENEVA LAKE, WISCONSIN
Dave Duwe emailed:
Lake Geneva 6/14/21 through 6/21/21
With the warm weather the bass have finished spawning and are starting to move deeper. The only bad thing with the warm weather is the increased boat traffic. You need to fish either early a.m. or late p.m. for the best success.
Largemouth bass are being caught in the spawning areas in 12-15 ft of water. Look for the fish in areas like Trinkes, Williams Bay or Geneva Bay between pier 5 and 22. The best approach has been split shotting either nightcrawlers or split shotting green pumpkin 4 inch lizards, I like Yum or Zoom. All of the fish are post spawn and with the warming water temperatures are starting to move out to the deeper lake basin.
Smallmouth bass have finished spawning and are still cruising the 12-15 ft range. Look for the fish by the Military Academy or by the Elgin Club. Dragging a football head jig with a Chompers Spider grub has been producing most of my action. You want to position the boat in 20 ft of water and cast into about 12-15 and slowly drag the jig to the boat. Nightcrawlers fished on a split shot rig are also catching numerous fish. The only problem is the Rock Bass and Bluegills are eating your bait as fast as you can put it down.
Panfish are unstoppable. They are literally everywhere around the lake. Keep your boat in 12-15 ft and you’ll get bit. Most of the fish are Rock bass with a few perch. The best location has been by Colemans Point, Knollwood and Pier 666.
Bluegills have been biting on the deep weedline in 15-18 ft of water. Most of the large fish are coming off of leaf worms fished straight beneath the boat. Unlike other years the average size has been 9-10 inches. It has again become fun to fish for bluegills on Lake Geneva. Much of my success has been by Elgin Club or Belvidere Park.
Some Lake Trout are being caught in 70-90 ft of water. Most of the success has come off of a silver Dodger and a blue Fly or a chrome and blue flutter spoon. Look for the fish by Covenant Harbor or by the Military Academy.
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
ProvidedMatt McNamara, of Orland Park, holds one of several nice bass he caught on a Senko with guide Mike Norris.
Guide Mike Norris texted the photo above and emailed this:
Fishing Report 6/14/2021
Mike Norris
Big Green Lake – Both smallmouth bass and rock bass fishing is good on Big Green right now and with improved water clarity, this bite will get better. Try crawlers or leeches on a drop shot rig in 10 -12 feet of water. Ned rigs are also working well.
Little Green Lake – A few still bass spawning along shoreline. Crappie fishing is good on minnows in deeper water. Muskie fishing is also good along weed lines. June is one of the best months for muskies on Little Green.
Fox Lake – The bluegill spawn is in full swing, and the largemouth bass are close by. Both species are being caught by homeowners fishing with shiners from piers. I am currently guiding on Fox Lake and doing well fishing with Senko’s for largemouth bass along rocky shorelines. Walleye fishing is good early and late in the day. Try trolling with spinners and crawlers in 12 -15 feet of water. Northern pike can be caught in 10 to 12 feet of water.
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
ProvidedPaul Rychlewski and John Saban found a feeding window while fishing smallmouth bass on the Chicago lakefront.
John Saban emailed the photo above and this on Sunday:
Hey Dale, we had about an hour and a half of a good feeding frenzy. All good sized fish including a 4.8 for me and a 4.5 for my partner Paul Rychlewski. I feel the smallies like the days when the wind and waves stir things up by the breakwalls, it’s tougher to fish but the bite is better.
JS
Provided by Kurt BrownMatt Dohse caught a big smallmouth bass last week on the Chicago lakefront.
Kurt Brown emailed the photo above and this last Tuesday:
Hi Dale,
My name is Kurt Brown and a friend of mine caught a monster smallie that I wanted to submit for fish of the week. The fishermen’s name is Matt Dohse and he caught a monster 5 Ibs. 1 oz. small mouth in Belmont harbor tonight on a zman ned rig. Please let me know if that’ll make the cut.
Carp and catfish Chicago River. Perch opening tomorrow. That’s about it
Perch tomorrow, the great hope.
Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:
Good morning Dale. With perch season opening tomorrow we will be opening now at 4 a.m. and still closing at 8 p.m. 7 days a wee.Fishing report isn’t much other than sheephead being caught mostly on the Horseshoe. Small mouth starting to get active again. There has been some nice perch caught and released while fishing for other fish, hopefully they’ll stick around. Have a good week.
Capt. Bob Poteshman of Confusion Charters said that out of Chicago coho are slow and scattered; there’s a good lakers morning, less active and deeper afternoons; work Dodgers and flies in 90 and deeper. Out of North Point, coho are very good in 120-130 with lots of 20-plus catches (and big coho), near the Wisconsin line (good band from the nuke plant to Kenosha) with the occasion steelhead, king and lake trout.
Mainly boat reports, and I have been getting calls about perch, so I know guys will be going.
May there be at least some perch around.
She added:
Boat fishing good, 60 to 90 to 120 feet
Capt. Scott Wolfe emailed:
We had the best fishing of the year out of Waukegan this week. Coho dominated the fishery with limits most trips. We had a few bonus kings a few lakers and lots of steelhead too. The best fishing continues to be 70 to 150 feet with about 100 feet being most consistent. Stubbie dodgers with 3 to 4 inch Aqua and Blue Liz Jimmy Flies on downriggers and divers took 80 percent of the fish with Warrior Lures XL size spoons in Lance’s Two Face, Two Face and Green Dragon Slayer on 5 to 10 color leadcores taking the rest. The biggest variable was trolling speed. Some days very, very slow and others normal to slightly fast. Trollers should change speeds frequently until they find that days pattern.
Harbor fishing was good. I saw several largemouth bass, pike and carp taken. Carp on hair rigs and bass and pike on the good old Johnson’s Silver minnow dressed with a twister tail. Work them through the weeds.
The Menominee River is at below average flow levels which makes for good fishing. Smallmouth bass have completed spawning on the Menominee River. Smallmouth are scattered and topwater baits are producing quality fish. PROP Baits are best. The best topwater bite is around any fresh weeds!! It looks like this year will be a banner year for topwater fishing on the Menominee River that will peak in late July and August. We have also had good success with Case Magic Stiks and Wacky Jacks when smallmouth are tight to the bottom. The 1/0 Spearpoint GP Finesse Hook is a must when rigging wacky Style.
MILLE LACS LAKE, MINNESOTA
Provided by McQuoids InnBest friends Rhonda and Billie caught walleye on Mille Lacs.
Justin Lederer checking in from McQuoids Inn Lake Mille Lacs. The walleye bite has been just as hot as the weather. I have been targeting 28-32 feet of water around the reefs and gravel beds. Leeches are still producing the best under a float set a foot off the bottom. Picking up a few on crawlers. Tried running cranks on lead core to get them down with no success. Live bait is still the best option right now.Smallmouth are in post spawn they have pushed out into the deeper edge of the reefs and off the shoreline. Guys are picking them up in 18-22 feet around the boulders. Plastics are producing well still they should start hitting jerk baits shortly.P.S Dale if there is any way you can publish both ladies it would be very much appreciated have a great week keep up the great work.
NORTHERN WISCONSIN
Ken “Husker” O’Malley emailed the report and photos below:
Hey Dale,
Here is a recap of this past weeks fishing.
Northern Wisconsin-the week plus heat wave finally ended this past Friday. Some of the shallower bays reached 80 degrees. I don’t believe I have seen water temps that high in early June.
Smallmouth are post spawn. Focus on steeper drops along points and the first drop off along spawning flats. Best bait has been the Berkley flatworm on a drop shot.
ProvidedKen “Husker” O’Malley found northern pike good early mornings in northern Wisconsin.
Pike are very good early morning in bays with good weed growth. X-raps and Mepps have been the best baits.
Largemouth have been good working a senko wackey rigged along shoreline cover and weed edges.
Here is the nature pic of the week courtesy of Hailey O’Malley.
The best defense against mosquitoes in the Northwoods.
Hailey O’Malley“Best defense against mosquitoes in the Northwoods,” Ken “Husker” O’Malley emailed.
The heat wave has finally broke with cooler temps and less humidity. That’s been a plus for angler comfort. The down side is, especially for Walleye anglers, we have to contend with Mayfly hatches.
Smallmouth Bass: Very Good – Reports of good sized fish coming in, many 4 and 5 pound fish being caught. Ned Rigs, tubes, drop shotting have all been effective. Look for the larger fish to come on the first breaks.
Walleye: Good – Pick your lakes, if you see Mayflies try a different lake. Lakes where Mayflies haven’t been an issue, fishing has been fairly good. Leeches seem to be producing the most fish. Fishing the weed beds, 8-15’ is a good area to target fish right now.
Largemouth Bass: Good – A lot of action being reported, Waxy worms, creature baits and tubes have all been producing. Look for the majority of fish to come on inside weed edges. Top-water action is starting to get better as well, pick your times to throw them though, mid-afternoon to sundown is when it has been best.
Musky: Good – Have been hearing quite a few fish being caught, most fish in the 30” range. Bucktails & swim baits have been producing, while top-water has been productive late in the day.
Northern Pike: Good – French spinners, spinner baits, and chatter baits fished above the weeds has been good as of late.
Crappies: Good – Plastics seem to be producing fairly well as of late. Crappie scrubs, twister tails, tubes worked over weeds in 8-12’ of water has been taking fish.
Bluegills: Good – Spawning is pretty much over, fishing remains good though, pick your bait of choice, leeches, worms, waxies are all working. For a little added fun, try a popper with a fly rod or a casting bubble.
Yellow Perch: Fair – Not many reports again, weed flats in the 10’ range has been getting fish, leeches and pieces of crawlers have been working.
Looks to be some cooler, more stable weather in the coming week, which will be a nice break from the 90 degree temps and strong storms. Remember Smallmouth Bass is still catch and release until June 19th.
Kurt Justice
Kurt’s Island Sport Shop Like us on FaceBook
NORTHWEST INDIANA
Provided by Bruce ZolnaCapt. Ed Landmichl (pictured) and Bruce Zolna had a good outing for coho out of Portage.
Bruce Zolna emailed the photo above and this:
Dale,
Friday, June 11, 2021 we fished from 1:30pm till 6:00pm for our limit of 10 coho of various sizes and 2 big Lakers, returned to Lake Michigan after quick pics.
This was my first Summer 2021 Trip #1 on Autonomous. We fished IN and IL water near MI border out of my slip in Sammie Maletta Marina @ the Ditch.
Capt Ed Landmichl and I targeted and got our limit of coho and 2 incidental big Lakers. One about 24 lbs, one near 18 lbs.
Great first trip on my boat to break in 2 rebuilt inboard Bluewater small-block V-8 Mercruiser Inboards.
Life is good. Good to be back.
Bruce A Zolna
Life does sound good.
ProvidedCapt. Rich Sleziak texted, “Good catches all last week aboard Triplecatch.”
Capt. Rich Sleziak at Slez’s Bait in Lake Station texted the photo above and this:
Fishing on the tri -state area out of burns ditch was good till north winds shut us down.
Orange dodgers and orange or red mini spindoctors with 2 inch flys along with spoons took all the fish.
Bluegills still going good at most lakes and ponds we other crickets and jumbo reds best baits
Catfish at night on triple s catfish bait along the portage river walk
Bizy Dale lots of groups fishing
Busy at fishing is good.
ROOT RIVER, WISCONSIN
Click here for the Wisconsin DNR’s report, usually on Tuesday or Wednesday.
SOUTHWEST MICHIGAN
Phil Schuman at Tackle Haven in Benton Harbor said walleye are being caught in river; steelhead should start soon off the piers; on Lake Michigan, trollers are catching lake trout in 100-150 with a few salmon out in 200-300.
Site hours through Oct. 31 are 6 a.m.-10 p.m. daily
Adam Honiotes at Boondocks Supply said there is a good run on walleye and hybrid stripers. “I would remind people hang on to their poles for those striper hits, we’ll lost five rods,” he said. Most of the hybrids (one to 13 pounds) are coming on chicken liver. Walleye are great, including some keepers, primarily on jigheads with a leech or crawler dragged on the bottom.
He also noted that they are now 100 percent, including the restaurant now open daily.
SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN
ProvidedJennifer D’Amico shows some of the weekend success in southeastern Wisconsin.
John D’Amico emailed the photo above and this:
I hope you’re doing well. I want to share the great time fishing with the family this weekend in southeast WI. The bass were extremely active and here is one of many that were caught.
Best,
John
SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN LAKEFRONT
Click here for the southern Lake Michigan reports from the Wisconsin DNR.
WISCONSIN RIVER
ProvidedRob Abouchar found fish, even with the Wisconsin River high and dirty.
Rob Abouchar emailed the photo above and this:
Hi Dale
I hit the wisconsin River in Merrill and it was quite eventful. Driving through the worst hailstorm i ever drove through in Wausau I knew the river would be high and dirty and the fishing might be tough. With Joe “The Grasseater Schatz” we hit the Friday Fish Fry and then the Wisconsin Rodeo that was in town. The Bull riding and Girls barrel racing were highlights in the flooded rodeo ring. On Saturday the water on Alexander was high and quite dirty areas. It took some work to get bites on smallmouth bass but a few were hitting Senkos either wacky rigged or Texas rigged. The pike action picked up in clearer water areas and we caught some esox on Spinnerbaits and bladed jigs with Kalins grub trailer. The next day we decided to get away from the dirty water and heavy pressure at Alexander. I noticed the flowage had a high number of hi performance bass rig guys fishing for Smallmouth. Sunday we headed to 7 Island Lake in Harrison Hills; what I call cottage country. We were able to land some largemouth and Smallmouth on the beautiful lake. We had some great Loon watching activity with a group of 5 Loons, some with brown heads diving and taking flight. & island lake is a beautiful lake known for Muskie but my Senko went untouched by the Esox there. Water temps were around 75 degrees at the river and lake.
On the music front I am looking for gigs for the original reggae band and may be getting close. Sending EPK promo kits to club owners and booking agents is like some kind of frustrating fishing exercise but i’m not quite sure what that is…sooner or later someone is gonna bite!
Tight lines and good Health
Rob
Provided by Rob AboucharBull riding in Wisconsin.
Why I so enjoy Abouchar’s report: Friday Fish Fry to bull riding to reggae.
WOLF RIVER, WISCONSIN
Guide Bill Stoeger in Fremont texted:
Water temp jumped up to 83 degrees last week. Fishing has slowed down a bit, although the walleye action continues to be good. Mainly deeper water, and crawlers. Some bluegills are being taken. The spawn was short and fast with the heat.
Fields was the No. 11 overall pick in the draft this year. | AP Photos
Inexplicably, Nagy declared Tuesday that there won’t be a quarterback competition between Dalton and Fields. Three months away from the season opener, he is adamant about going with Dalton.
Give up any dream of seeing Justin Fields start at quarterback in the Bears’ season opener. The competition between him and veteran Andy Dalton is officially closed, with coach Matt Nagy determining three months in advance that there’s no way Fields could overtake Dalton.
He could not have been clearer: There is no quarterback competition.
“Yes, correct,” he said as all of Chicago groaned in thudding disappointment.
“We all get excited about Justin Fields,” Nagy continued. “We’d all be lying if we said something different. With that said, we’re excited about Andy Dalton, too.”
That means regardless of Fields’ immense talent and how much progress he could potentially make between now and the Week 1 game at the Rams, Nagy already knows he’s going with a 33-year-old whose career passer rating is just three-tenths of a point better than Mitch Trubisky’s.
Case closed.
Nagy’s rationale was organization’s unwavering commitment to essentially red-shirt Fields for a season as he develops. The goal is for him to take over by the start of 2022, and after watching Chiefs star Patrick Mahomes’ success in a similar plan, Nagy intends to follow it regardless of how Dalton and Fields look in training camp.
The Bears signed Dalton to a one-year, $10 million deal in March only after the Seahawks rejected their aggressive trade offer for Russell Wilson. Part of their recruitment was telling Dalton he was their starter and that they were done pursuing other NFL quarterbacks.
“They told me I was the starter, [and] that was one of the reasons why I wanted to come here,” Dalton said at the time. “That’s the assurance that I’ve gotten.”
It was obvious then that the Bears might still take a quarterback high in the draft, but there was always an understanding that Dalton was first on the depth chart. And, sure enough, Nagy called Dalton immediately after the Bears traded up to draft Fields at No. 11 overall to reassure him that he was still the starter
Nagy stopped short of saying the team guaranteed Dalton that when he signed, but there was at least a handshake agreement.
“There were no promises, but… I specifically told him, ‘You’re our starter,’” Nagy said. “That being said, does that mean that these guys aren’t competing? Absolutely not. They’re competing.”