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Leaked call shows alleged bribe by Wilson consultant to Ja’Mal GreenTiffany Walden and Andrew Davison December 9, 2022 at 12:21 am

This article was originally published by The TRiiBE.

An audio recording allegedly between mayoral candidate Willie Wilson’s political consultant Rickey Hendon and a volunteer for Ja’Mal Green’s campaign has leaked—and the talk details a bribe offered to Green’s team to drop the petition challenge against Wilson.

Green is also accusing Wilson of violating the residency requirements to run for Chicago mayor, claiming Wilson’s main home is in south suburban Hazel Crest. The two candidates have a history dating back to at least the 2019 Chicago municipal election, when Hendon—who was Wilson’s campaign advisor at the time—challenged Green’s petitions. After that, Green clashed with Hendon, with Hendon later posting on Facebook that he and Green exchanged threats about fighting one another. 

“If you withdraw, I will take care of you. And you can tell me how much you would need,” Hendon, a former state senator and 27th Ward alderperson, allegedly said on the recent phone call. That audio was released on Thursday. 

Chicago-based What’s the Word TV was the first media outlet to publish the full recording on its Instagram page on Thursday morning. What’s the Word TV has since removed the video, although The TRiiBE has retained the audio and video. (Read the full transcript below.) 

Additionally, Chicago-based blog Chicago Media Takeout posted the video on its Instagram page, and it was still up at publishing time.

“You know, don’t nobody want you to lose money, you know, ‘cause Ja’Mal ain’t ‘gon be on the ballot, bro. I wouldn’t do that shit,” Hendon allegedly continued on the call. He also mentioned 6th Ward alderperson Roderick Sawyer, who is also in the 2023 race for mayor.

“Sawyer ain’t gon be on the ballot,” Hendon allegedly said. “I never miss. Don’t shoot if I’ma miss.”

In a response to The TRiiBE, Wilson’s campaign spokesperson Richard Boykin confirmed that Hendon’s voice is on the recording.

“The comments made by former Sen. Rickey Hendon were not authorized by me or my campaign. This is a personal issue between Sen. Hendon and Mr. Green,” Boykin wrote in a press release on Thursday.

In a press release issued at 4:45 PM on Thursday, Green’s team identified the volunteer on the call as Kevin Hobby and acknowledged the conversation. Green said, “I’m glad someone was able to capture the corrupt openness Ricky has. Let me just say that the old way of politics is pulling some desperate moves to drag me and my campaign down, going so far as to offer financial compensation to my ally. This city’s corrupt nature shows its face almost out in the open now. The sleazy deals, the open bribery, the big money talking—it needs to end! That’s why I am running for mayor in the first place. 

“It’s time for the new generation of leadership, if the audio didn’t prove it then I’m not sure what will.”

Illinois law makes it a felony to intercept, record or transcribe any private telephone or electronic communication unless all parties consent. The TRiiBE has not yet been able to verify if the conversation was recorded legally.

According to Crain’s Chicago Business, businessman Wilson and community activist and entrepreneur Green are attempting to rid the current 11-candidate field of the other, while Wilson also filed a separate challenge to Sawyer. Other candidates are seeking to knock off long-shot candidates Frederick Collins and Johnny Logalbo.

TRANSCRIPT:

Rickey Hendon: And I ain’t even gotta tell you, you know. The lines, we both know y’all weren’t in there looking at them [unintelligible] lines. So Willie’s gonna make it. Ja’Mal is not. Why you have to suffer? We can work something out. You come on our team or not. But I didn’t want to jam you, bruh. I got people that know you that’s [unintelligible] a game called [unintelligible]. So that’s where I’m coming from. 

Kevin Hobby: What you, what you, what you offering?

Rickey Hendon: Say what now?

Kevin Hobby: What you offering?

Rickey Hendon: Well, you know, everybody can use some help financially. So I will help you there if that was the case. I mean, I could just go through the case, you know, Willie got money. He can pay the lawyer. Done paid the lawyer already. But I’d like to get it over with, you know, so let me know what you’re trying to do. I mean–

Kevin Hobby: [unintelligible]

Rickey Hendon: You know, if you withdraw, I will take care of you. And you can tell me how much you would need. You know, don’t nobody want you to lose money, you know, ‘cause Ja’Mal ain’t ‘gon be on the ballot, bro. I wouldn’t do that shit. I had 25 people down there for a week. Sawyer ain’t gon be on the ballot. I never miss. Don’t shoot if I’ma miss. So what about what’s ‘gon happen with you? You know, you got a family, you know, kids and shit. They gotta eat. Christmas coming up. I go through this. And then, you know, the Board can look at the shotgun that they did on Willie because y’all hit every name on every page, you know, and refer that shit over to the State’s Attorney. Who wants to do that? I don’t want to do that to you. 

Kevin Hobby: Right.

Rickey Hendon: Yup. So just think it over and then you let me know if it’s something you willing to do. So just think it over and then let me know if it’s something you willing to do. You know, you’d have to, you know, file it. You know, if it’s a document, you’d have to file it, you know, 69 W. Washington. Just withdraw the objection against Willie. And I’ll look out for you. 

Kevin Hobby: Mmhm.

Rickey Hendon: I don’t like putting, you know, amounts and stuff. We are talking on the phone. But you can tell me, ‘Look. OK. I’ma do it.’ Soon as you do it, I’ll meet up with you. I’ll meet you down there. You know what I’m saying? And if you talk in the streets with people who know me, like the people who call me about you, they’ll tell you, ‘Rickey Hendon keeps his word.’ Whether it’s good or bad, you know, I’ma keep my word. You know?

Kevin Hobby: Right.

Rickey Hendon: That’s why I’m kicking Ja’Mal off. ‘Cause I told him that, ‘N*gga, if you run for dogcatcher or bootylicker, I’ma kick you off the ballot. Every time. Your shit better be perfect. Every time.’ I guess he thought I was joking. I’m serious, you know.

—recording ends—


The latecomers and superstitious test their luck with a lottery, hoping to get the last spot on the ballot.


Dozens have filed petitions to run for the newly created councils.


Career politicians are stepping down, and there’s now an opportunity for new—and possibly progressive—Black leaders to take the reins.

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Leaked call shows alleged bribe by Wilson consultant to Ja’Mal GreenTiffany Walden and Andrew Davison December 9, 2022 at 12:21 am Read More »

Fantasy 30: Anthony Edwards, Julius Randle and other NBA noteson December 9, 2022 at 12:20 am

The best fantasy basketball managers make a habit of looking at the NBA schedule, examining box scores and scouring the news for any tidbit that can help give them the edge in their leagues.

Luckily, Eric Moody does all that work for you each and every Thursday with the Fantasy 30, helping answer the tough questions such as whom to start, who are the best fantasy basketball sleepers out there and what’s the latest injury news with key players around the league.

Here’s the latest fantasy news from each of the 30 teams around the league.

Atlanta Hawks: Dejounte Murray left Wednesday’s game against the Hawks after just four minutes due to a left ankle sprain. The void was filled by Aaron Holiday, who finished with 21 fantasy points. Holiday becomes a streaming option with Murray now expected to miss two weeks. Holiday is only rostered in 0.2% of ESPN leagues.

There’s still time to play Fantasy Basketball this season! With leagues tipping off every Monday, it’s the perfect time to get started. Create or join a league today.

Play for free!

Boston Celtics: The Celtics have scored at least 125 points in 12 games, the most in the league. In Wednesday night’s game against the Suns, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum each scored 25 or more points for the 14th time this season. Among all duos, this is the most in the league.

Brooklyn Nets: Ben Simmons is expected to play against the Hawks on Friday. In the past, the Nets have been cautious with Simmons. It wouldn’t be surprising if he came off the bench and had his minutes limited in his first game back from a left calf strain. In four of his last five games, Joe Harris has scored 26 or more fantasy points. Harris remains on the streaming radar in deeper formats even with Simmons back on Friday.

Charlotte Hornets: Jalen McDaniels is only rostered in 7.3% of ESPN leagues and it is truly baffling. Gordon Hayward‘s shoulder injury has positioned McDaniels for success, and now P.J. Washington could miss time with an eye injury. McDaniels has scored 33 or more fantasy points in four of the last five games. He is having the most productive offensive season of his career.

Chicago Bulls: Over the last eight games, Zach LaVine has put up some solid stats for fantasy managers. He’s averaged 24.4 PPG, 5.9 RPG, 4.6 APG and 1.6 SPG during that spanning, scoring at least 32 fantasy points in every game.

Cleveland Cavaliers: On Wednesday, Jarrett Allen returned from his back injury to score 55 fantasy points against the Lakers. Since Evan Mobley‘s statistical performance may drop, fantasy managers should consider trading him away right now. Two players to trade for would be Zion Williamson or Jerami Grant.

Dallas Mavericks: Luka Doncic had his 52nd career triple-double on Tuesday against the Nuggets. Among players age 23 or younger, it’s the second most in league history. In other Mavericks news, Tim Hardaway Jr. has delivered some outstanding performances after struggling with his shot for much of the first part of the season. He has scored 34 or more fantasy points in five consecutive games and is only rostered in only 21.5% of ESPN leagues.

Denver Nuggets: As Michael Porter Jr. continues to miss time due to a left heel strain, Bruce Brown is starting and impressing for the Nuggets. Over the last seven games, he’s scored 25 or more fantasy points in five of them. Brown is only rostered in 28.3% of ESPN leagues.

Detroit Pistons: Killian Hayes (25.1% rostered) is another player who should be on more fantasy teams. In spite of the return of Jaden Ivey, Hayes continues to receive significant usage. In the last five games, Hayes has averaged 37.6 fantasy points during the past five games and is well positioned to thrive due to the continued absence of Cade Cunningham.

2 Related

Golden State Warriors: Against the Jazz on Wednesday night, Jordan Poole reminded fantasy managers how lethal he can be whenever one of the Warriors’ perimeter starters is out. With Stephen Curry and Andrew Wiggins unavailable against the Jazz, Poole prospered with 36 points, four rebounds and eight assists.

Houston Rockets: Flashes of Tari Eason‘s fantasy potential has been on display in recent games. The only thing he needs is to play more minutes. Eason has scored 40 or more fantasy points three times in the last six games he has played 20 or more minutes in. Eason is only rostered in 7.9% of ESPN leagues, and the Rockets could use all the assistance they can get.

Indiana Pacers: On Wednesday night, Tyrese Haliburton became the first player in Pacers history to score 25 points and accumulate 15 assists in a game. Aside from Stephen Curry, he is the only other player to accomplish this feat this season. Haliburton has averaged 50.6 fantasy points per game. In the two recent games Haliburton missed, rookie Andrew Nembhard played well, including an electric performance against Curry and the Warriors. Keep him on your watch list.

LA Clippers: Kawhi Leonard and Paul George have played 110 games together, including the regular season and playoffs. Together, they shot 25.9% from the field against the Magic on Wednesday, their worst field goal percentage since joining the Clippers in 2019-20. Meanwhile, fantasy managers who waited to draft Ivica Zubac at the center position have been pleased with the results. Against the Magic, Zubac recorded his 12th double-double of the season.

Los Angeles Lakers: Thomas Bryant had an opportunity to showcase his skills for the Lakers’ coaching staff with Anthony Davis out, and he delivered. In two consecutive games, Bryant scored 31 or more fantasy points. Whether he gets more minutes remains to be seen, but fantasy managers should keep an eye on him for whenever AD misses time. Bryant is only rostered in 8.3% of ESPN leagues.

Memphis Grizzlies: In three to four weeks, Desmond Bane, who is out with a toe sprain, will begin a gradual reloading protocol. Until then, John Konchar, who is only rostered in 4.4% of ESPN leagues, will continue to benefit. Over the last 11 games, he’s averaged 10.3 PPG, 7.5 RPG, 1.7 APG and 1.3 SPG.

Miami Heat: Victor Oladipo played 19 minutes in his season debut on Tuesday. He finished with nine points, two rebounds and two assists. Gabe Vincent is out with a knee injury, so Oladipo should get playing time, but he will be on a minutes restriction in the near future. Oladipo should remain on fantasy managers’ watch lists for now. He averaged 12.4 PPG, 3.5 APG and 2.9 RPG.

Friday

Lakers-76ers, 7:30 p.m.Bucks-Mavericks, 10 p.m.

Wednesday

Knicks-Bulls, 7:30 p.m.Timberwolves-Clippers, 10 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Milwaukee Bucks: In his last eight games, Giannis Antetokounmpo has averaged 35.9 points, 9.6 rebounds and 5.9 assists. In Bucks franchise history, only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has averaged 35 PPG over eight games. This season, Antetokounmpo has averaged 52.7 fantasy points per game.

Minnesota Timberwolves: It has been three straight games where Anthony Edwards has scored 25 points or more and had at least five steals. The last three players to accomplish this feat were Chris Paul in 2009, Allen Iverson in 2002 and Michael Jordan in 1990. Since steals became official in 1973-74, Jordan is the only player to do it in four consecutive games.

New Orleans Pelicans: In the Western Conference, the Pelicans are in first place. Zion Williamson had at least 25 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists for the sixth time in his career on Wednesday night. Trey Murphy III remains a viable streamer while Brandon Ingram is out with a toe injury. In six consecutive games, Murphy has scored 30 or more fantasy points. He is only rostered in 26.1% of ESPN leagues.

New York Knicks: On Wednesday night against the Hawks, Julius Randle had his 27th career game with at least 25 points, 10 rebounds and five assists with the Knicks. Randle has had a slow start to the season, but things have picked up for him lately, especially in the last eight games. Seven of those games have seen Randle score 33 or more fantasy points, including three with 40 or more.

Oklahoma City Thunder: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has scored less than 50 fantasy points in two consecutive games and has 50 or more fantasy points only once in the last four games. Surprised? This is how high the bar has become for Gilgeous-Alexander this year.

Orlando Magic: Recovering from his foot injury, Wendell Carter Jr. is about a week away from returning to play. Currently, he’s an intriguing trade candidate for fantasy managers. Carter Jr. has averaged 16.6 points and 9.1 rebounds this season, putting up 32 fantasy points per game.

Philadelphia 76ers: During the past two games, Tobias Harris has played very well with 40 or more fantasy points in each of them. While it was great to see James Harden back on the court with the 76ers after 14 missed games, The Beard struggled in his return on Monday. In the near term, Shake Milton can still be streamed while Harden gets his feet under him.

Phoenix Suns: Devin Booker has struggled from the field during the past two games, which is reflected in his fantasy point totals of 24 and 17. Since Booker has averaged 45.8 fantasy points per game this season, this is atypical for the Suns’ star shooting guard. In Wednesday’s game against the Celtics, Booker finished with a -40 plus minus, his 2nd-worst in a game for his entire career. With a usage rate of 32.6%, he should bounce back sooner rather than later.

Portland Trail Blazers: It’s great news that Damian Lillard‘s return hasn’t negatively affected Jerami Grant‘s play. In Lillard’s return against the Pacers on Sunday, Grant scored 35 fantasy points. Grant has scored 42 or more fantasy points six times in the last six games, including two games with over 50 points.

o 10 things for Nov. 18, including Embiido The Wizards’ incredible new courto Is Draymond Green a superstar?o League Pass Rankings: Pt. 1 Pt. 2o The Lowe Post: ESPN

Fantasy 30: Anthony Edwards, Julius Randle and other NBA noteson December 9, 2022 at 12:20 am Read More »

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ClassifiedsChicago Readeron December 8, 2022 at 3:00 pm

JOBS

Multiple Software Developers needed to develop, create, & modify computer applications software or specialized utility programs. Analyze user needs & develop software solutions. Design software or customize software for client use with the aim of optimizing operational efficiency. All of the above duties will be performed using webMethods, MuleSoft Anypoint Platform & Oracle Integration Cloud; OR Calypso, Java, Oracle; OR Calypso, Java, & SQL; OR skills in Java(CS2) Data Structures and Algorithms, Web Development, & Web Design & Management; OR MVC, Microsoft Azure, Microsoft SQL Server; OR Loan IQ, HP QTP, & SOAPUI. Multiple positions available for Software Developers using one of the above combination of skills or tools. Software Quality Assurance Tester needed to develop & execute software tests to identify software problems & their causes. Identify, analyze, & document problems or content. Design test plans, scenarios, scripts, or procedures. All of the above duties will be performed using Facets, EDI, & Oracle DB. Project Manager needed to plan, initiate, & manage information technology (IT) projects. Lead & collaborate with different technical & functional teams for smooth integration of the solution. All of the above duties are performed using AWS, SQL Server, & .NET. Not all positions require all skills & tools. Work locations for all positions will include Chicago, IL & also at various unanticipated locations in the U.S., as assigned, which may require relocation. Applicants should clearly identify the position they are applying for in their cover letter. The resume must specifically list all post- secondary education, training, or experience. Resumes must show if the applicant has any of the mentioned combination of skills or tools. Mail all resumes to Quinnox, Inc., Attn: EVP – HCM, 1 South Wacker Drive, Ste # 3150, Chicago, IL 60606.

Medline Industries, LP has multi open’gs in Mundelein, IL for:A) IS Developer Analyst(s) (Managed Care) for dsgn’g & implmnt’g solut’ns for Managed Care apps & initiatives. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100PWB) Sr. Demand Planners for the dvlpmnt, monitor’g, & communication of demand forecast. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=SUP01014FC) Sr. Database Administrator(s) for data mngmnt & ensuring the perfrmnc & reliability of var operat’g systms. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100PVD) Sr. SAN Storage Administrators to implmnt, monitor, troubleshoot, maintain, upgrade, & secure all SAN Storage systms. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100P0

Medline Industries, LP has multi open’gs in Northfield, IL for: A) Sr. IS Systems Analyst (SAP HANA Data Warehouse) to work closely w/ BI biz solut’ns & SAP Basis teams, to assist in the dsgn & dvlp of report’g standards, policies, & procedures for the BI dept. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100PXB) Sr. Regulatory Affairs Specialists to plan & execute critical & complex global regulatory projs to obtain & maintain global regulatory approvals. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=QUA0101JIC) Business Intelligence (BI) Leads to dsgn & dvlp solut’ns & BI reports & dashboards based on defined biz. reqs. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100P1D) Associate Configuration Analysts to work closely w/ the biz community & app team to perform funct’l analysis for dsgn solut’ns & eval. options. No trvl; WFH bnft avail. Apply at: https://medline.taleo.net/careersection/md_confidential/jobapply.ftl?lang=en&job=INF0100PZ

Software DeveloperINFI USA is looking for a Software Developer to develop and maintain the existing apps and the self-ordering Kiosk systems, Kiosk payment terminals, and label printers. Req. Bachelor’s degree in Software Engineering, Information Technology, Computer Science, or related fields. Knowledge of Android, iOS, Java, and HTML programming languages. Worksite: Chicago, Illinois. Send resume: CTO. 159 N Sangamon St. Suite 200 office 251, Chicago IL 60607

Research Data Science AnalystNorthwestern UniversityChicago, ILProvides expertise in overall data science methods and algorithm design, bio-statistical approaches, data management, quality assurance, and various forms of data interfacing and reporting. The data engineers/scientist will use their broad knowledge of applied mathematics and statistics to create new algorithms to interpret, manipulate, and derive actionable insights of highly multimodal clinical and operational data.Must have a Master’s degree in Biostatistics or a related field. Degree studies must include coursework in Advanced Epidemiology and Applied Statistical Programming. Must have two years experience as a Research Data Analyst. Must have two years experience in building predictive models from data. Qualified applicants should submit their resume on https://careers.northwestern.edu by searching for Job ID 46449.

Market Research AnalystIntermodel Services & Logistics, Inc. Research market conditions to determine sales for trucking business, L/N. Analyze statistic data to forecast potential increase of customers & market shares to further develop business. Examine competitors’ methods of advertising & client’s needs to improve company’s services. Req. Bachelor’s Degree plus 24-mth exp. Email Resume: [email protected] Work area: Tinley Park, IL

PROFESSIONALS & SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES CHESTNUT ORGANIZING AND CLEANING SERVICES: especially for people who need an organizing service because of depression, elderly, physical or mental challenges or other causes for your home’s clutter, disorganization, dysfunction, etc. We can organize for the downsizing of your current possessions to more easily move into a smaller home. With your help, we can help to organize your move. We can organize and clean for the deceased in lieu of having the bereaved needing to do the preparation to sell or rent the deceased’s home. We are absolutely not judgmental; we’ve seen and done “worse” than your job assignment. With your help, can we please help you? Chestnut Cleaning Service: 312-332-5575. www.ChestnutCleaning.com

RESEARCH

Have you had an unwanted sexual experience since age 18?Did you tell someone in your life about it who is also willing to participate? Women ages 18+ who have someone else in their life they told about their experience also willing to participate will be paid to complete a confidential online research survey for the Women’s Dyadic Support Study. Contact Dr. Sarah Ullman of the University of Illinois at Chicago, Criminology, Law, & Justice Department at [email protected], 312-996-5508. Protocol #2021-0019.

ADULT SERVICES

Danielle’s Lip Service, Erotic Phone Chat. 24/7. Must be 21+. Credit/Debit Cards Accepted. All Fetishes and Fantasies Are Welcomed. Personal, Private and Discrete. 773-935-4995

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CPD denied scores of undocumented crime victims a path to citizenship

This article was originally published by Injustice Watch, a nonpartisan, nonprofit journalism organization that conducts in-depth research exposing institutional failures that obstruct justice and equality.

After his brakes started acting up on I-94 one night last November, tractor-trailer driver Nodirjon Zakirjonov decided to pull over to the side of the road in the Pullman neighborhood to fix the problem. But in the middle of his repairs, the 30-year-old was suddenly struck on the head and knocked unconscious. When he came to, he felt his abdomen “burning.” He’d been stabbed and robbed.

The assault left the immigrant from Uzbekistan with a ten-inch scar across his torso and deeper trauma. For months, he struggled to drive long distances, and any slight mishap on the road triggered a panic attack. 

“I was living in a horror film,” he said in a recent interview.

Zakirjonov found it hard to talk about the assault, but eventually he confided in his friends, and one of them suggested that he apply for a U visa. 

A U visa offers temporary legal status and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who were victims of certain crimes and who are considered to be helpful or “likely to be helpful” to law enforcement. Congress created the visa program in 2000 to encourage undocumented immigrants to report crimes and help law enforcement better serve immigrant communities.

Zakirjonov immigrated to Chicago on a student visa but lost his legal status after graduating from Concordia University Chicago with a master’s degree in 2020. A few months after the assault, Zakirjonov contacted an immigration attorney to apply for a U visa. But before he could submit his application, he needed the Chicago Police Department to certify that he was indeed a qualified crime victim who had cooperated in their investigation. His lawyer, Julia Sverdloff, mailed his certification request to CPD in April. She was confident he’d get certified.

But what should have been a straight-forward process turned into a monthslong nightmare.

First, police officials said he needed to prove his identity. Then they told him that a detective had tried to reach him to no avail. After Zakirjonov sent a sworn affidavit promising to help investigators, CPD denied him a third time, telling him that he needed to call detectives and ask them to reopen his case. An open investigation isn’t a requirement for police to sign a U visa certification, but Zakirjonov did as he was told. He met with detectives in August, and they reopened his case. But CPD denied him again the next month, saying he didn’t have “credible and reliable information” about the crime.

“When I was informed in a straightforward way that CPD is not believing me, I said, ‘That’s all.’ That was the last shot,” he said.

An Injustice Watch investigation found that the department has denied hundreds of U visa certification requests from undocumented crime victims this year, many of them at odds with federal certification standards and some that appeared to violate state law.

Two Chicago police sergeants, Brandon Ternand and John Poulos, issued most of the denials reviewed by Injustice Watch. Both sergeants have fatally shot civilians and had serious questions raised by investigators about their credibility. Both also faced termination, but in 2018 the Chicago Police Board allowed them to keep their jobs. The city has paid out more than $3 million in settlements and judgments relating to the two sergeants.

Police watchdogs said the decision to designate Ternand and Poulos as U visa certifiers raises questions about CPD’s selection process for the job.

“To the extent that the Police Department has any interest in building its legitimacy or establishing public trust, you don’t put people who violated the most fundamental tenets of public trust and CPD rules . . . in positions in which their credibility [and] integrity matters,” said Craig Futterman, director of the Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project at the University of Chicago. “I can’t imagine anything more basic than that.”

Attorneys and legal advocates who regularly work on U visa applications called the number of denials by CPD in the last year “unprecedented” and said they worried it will discourage Chicago’s undocumented immigrants from reporting crimes.

“All it takes is one person that you know who had a negative encounter with law enforcement to affect your willingness to come forward in assisting in an investigation or prosecution of a crime,” said Trisha Teofilo Olave, a legal project manager at the Chicago-based National Immigrant Justice Center who represents dozens of U visa applicants.

Last month, after Injustice Watch started reporting this story and following weeks of complaints from immigration attorneys to officials in Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office, sources said that CPD said it would revise its policies on U visa certifications. The most significant change will require the department’s Office of Legal Affairs to review all denials as well as handle appeals of previously denied requests.

CPD did not answer any questions raised by Injustice Watch and did not respond to interview requests for Ternand and Poulos. Instead, the department issued a brief written statement in which it vowed to “continue working to ensure the U visa certification process is in accordance with the federal guidelines.”

Certifying officers ‘don’t understand the law’

Unlike many other law enforcement agencies, CPD said it doesn’t keep data on the number of U visa certification requests it receives or how many it denies. But in response to a public records request, department officials told Injustice Watch in October that CPD has denied “at least 800” U visa certifications in the last two years alone.

By comparison, in 2021, police in Los Angeles denied fewer than 350 certification requests and police in New York denied about 150 requests, according to data from those departments. Each of those two cities is home to at least 150,000 more undocumented immigrants than Chicago, recent estimates from each city show.

At Injustice Watch’s request, Chicago police reviewed a batch of recently closed certification cases—110 in all—and determined that 57 of those requests had been denied, a denial rate of nearly 52 percent. That would put Chicago well above other major cities—including New York, Los Angeles, Houston, Minneapolis, and San Francisco—in the percentage of requests denied, according to 2021 data from those departments.

The U visa program was created as part of larger legislation aimed at curbing human trafficking and violence against women. But many of the certifications denied by CPD have been for victims of the very crimes that qualify under the law—including domestic violence and sexual assault.

Leslye Orloff, an expert in U visas and director of the National Immigrant Women’s Advocacy Project at American University, reviewed the denials for Injustice Watch and found that many of those decisions ran contrary to federal certification guidelines.

Poulos and Ternand collectively signed more than three-quarters of the denial letters that CPD provided to Injustice Watch.

Orloff, who helped write the law that created the U visa and trains police departments nationwide on its implementation, concluded that the sergeants “don’t understand the law”—and called into question CPD’s monitoring of their work. “The fact that [the denials] are going out the door means that their supervising structure isn’t checking to see if they’re getting it right,” she said.

Despite the complaints from immigration attorneys, Ternand and Poulos remained U visa certifying officers as of late October, CPD records show.

Credit: Verónica Martinez

Before certifying U visas, Poulos and Ternand faced termination

The Chicago Police Department did not respond to questions about why Poulos and Ternand were assigned to Unit 163, the Records Inquiry Section that reviews U visa certification requests, following failed attempts to fire them.

Poulos, who is white, shot and killed two Black men in separate incidents in just over three years. In an off-duty incident in August 2013, Poulos said Rickey Rozelle, 28, threatened to kill him before Poulos shot him. Records show that investigators didn’t recover a weapon. The city later settled with Rozelle’s family for $950,000. While on duty in November 2016, authorities said Poulos fatally shot 19-year-old Kajuan Raye in the back during a foot chase. Oversight agencies cleared Poulos of wrongdoing in both shootings, but a jury awarded Raye’s family $1 million in a civil suit. Poulos claimed Raye pointed a gun at him, but forensics experts hired by both sides said in court filings that a gun in Raye’s possession was tucked away in his jacket pocket when Poulos shot him.

After Raye’s death, then-police superintendent Eddie Johnson filed charges to fire Poulos. But the charges had nothing to do with the shootings. Instead, they stemmed from two internal investigations from years earlier that found Poulos had concealed a past arrest when he applied to be an officer and had an ownership stake in his family’s sports bar once he got the job, a violation of CPD policy. Internal Affairs had recommended that Poulos be fired for those infractions in 2007, but police brass never followed through. By the time Johnson filed charges with the police board in 2017, Poulos had received a “merit promotion” to sergeant, according to the Tribune

In its 2017 report on CPD’s systemic failures in the wake of Laquan McDonald’s fatal shooting, the Justice Department singled out Poulos’ case for comment, saying CPD could have stopped his promotion—and potentially stopped him from killing Raye—if the department had a “functioning early intervention” system to alert officials of problem officers.

But in February 2018, the police board—chaired then by Lightfoot—unanimously ruled against firing Poulos, concluding that CPD took too long to bring the charges against him. Records show that Johnson designated Poulos as a U visa certifying officer in September 2018.

A few weeks later, the police board cleared Ternand of any wrongdoing in his fatal shooting of high school freshman Dakota Bright. During a foot chase in November 2012, Ternand, who is white, fired a single shot, hitting Bright in the back of the head. The officer said he saw the Black 15-year-old reach for a gun. But Bright was unarmed when Ternand shot him; police later recovered a gun 200 feet away from Bright’s body, WBEZ reported. The city’s police oversight agency ruled the shooting unjustified in 2017 after finding many “inconsistencies” in Ternand’s account.

However, in a five-three ruling that kept Ternand on the force, the police board said that his testimony was “credible and persuasive” and praised Ternand as a “highly decorated” officer who had a “reputation for honesty.”

That was despite the more than two dozen misconduct complaints Ternand had racked up in the years before and after killing Bright, including allegations that Ternand had lied in police reports about using excessive force. In one case, Cook County prosecutors declined to bring charges against a man whom Ternand said hit him after a CPD detective found bystander footage of the incident that contradicted Ternand’s police report, according to a civil lawsuit the man later filed.

Like most misconduct complaints against Chicago police officers, none of those complaints against Ternand were sustained. In all, Ternand was named in five lawsuits that cost Chicago taxpayers more than $1 million in settlements between 2011 and 2016, according to records collected by the Chicago Reporter.

After the police board saved his job, Ternand was transferred to the 11th District on the west side. Ternand was assigned to Unit 163 in January, and Superintendent David Brown designated him as a U visa certifying officer a month later.

Poulos and Ternand did not respond to a request for comment.

Former Chicago inspector general Joe Ferguson, who oversaw investigations of police policies and practices, told Injustice Watch that if CPD is going to keep Ternand and Poulos on the force, “they certainly should not be put into a position that involves their certification of official matters, for which their veracity and their credibility is critical.”

‘Looking for excuses to deny’

Not long after Ternand joined the U visa unit, some attorneys started noticing an uptick in denials of certification requests.

“Starting in April, we started noticing this trend where they were getting denied for no reason,” Shelby Vcelka, an immigration attorney with Victory Law Office in Berwyn, told Injustice Watch.

One of those denials was for Reyna Mariano, a 40-year-old, undocumented mother from Mexico whose teenage son was shot and killed in 2017. Under federal law, parents and other immediate family members of deceased minor victims of qualifying crimes can apply for a U visa as an “indirect victim.”

Mariano told Injustice Watch that at first she didn’t want to apply for a U visa because she felt guilty about “getting something out of” her son’s death. She decided to apply for the visa earlier this year because she believed obtaining legal status and a work permit would help her provide for her four-year-old daughter.

But Ternand denied her U visa certification request, saying without explanation that she didn’t qualify as an indirect victim. Vcelka appealed the denial, but Poulos denied her request again on the same grounds. Mariano was later granted certification from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted her son’s killing.

CPD also denied at least a dozen requests from domestic violence survivors this year, the Injustice Watch investigation found.

In one of those cases, a 43-year-old woman on the south side, who had obtained an order of protection against her former partner, called police after he threw her “onto the ground multiple times” according to a police report. Ternand denied her certification, saying she hadn’t suffered “substantial physical harm.” In another example, Ternand denied a request from a 23-year-old woman who told police she locked herself in her room as her knife-wielding father tried to open the door while shouting threats to kill her.  Again, Ternand said the woman hadn’t suffered substantial harm.

But federal certification guidelines issued by the Department of Homeland Security say that it’s up to immigration officials—not local law enforcement—to determine if U visa applicants have suffered enough harm to qualify for the visa.

“The fact that they’re denying based on substantial harm is totally wrong,” Orloff said. “Denying based on substantial harm, to me, says that they’re looking for excuses to deny that the law doesn’t require.”

Poulos also denied at least six certification requests because, he said, the crimes listed on the police report—“simple assault-domestic” and “simple battery-domestic”—weren’t qualifying crimes.

“That’s wrong—‘Simple assault–domestic related’ is domestic violence,” Orloff said. “Each of these officers are doing things that are dead wrong on the law.”

Immigration attorneys said it makes sense for CPD to deny some of the hundreds of U visa certification requests it receives every year. 

“It shouldn’t be a rubber stamp. Not everyone should get a certification,” said attorney Carlos Becerra. “But I think the other extreme is denying certifications and having either a very flimsy basis for doing it or having no basis.”

Becerra sued CPD last month after Ternand denied a U visa certification for one of his clients, a rideshare driver who was attacked by a passenger, leaving him with a broken nose, according to the lawsuit. Ternand denied the man twice for allegedly failing to cooperate in the investigation, even though he “provided evidence that the case had [been] reopened,” the lawsuit says.

In 2017, a report by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights found that law enforcement agencies across the state had inconsistent policies on U visa certification that often conflicted with federal guidelines.

The following year, the Illinois General Assembly passed the VOICES Act, which set statewide guidelines on U visa certifications. The law requires law enforcement agencies to recertify U visa applicants whose initial certification had expired. Under federal law, the certifications expire after six months, but immigrants and their lawyers often need more time than that to file their U visa applications.

CPD, however, denied several recertification requests this year, including one for a woman who was sexually assaulted as a minor, according to attorneys and records reviewed by Injustice Watch.

In 2021, Governor. J.B. Pritzker signed additional legislation requiring law enforcement agencies statewide to report the number of U visa certification requests they’ve received and approved or denied each year. The first of those reports is due in March. The Justice Department’s Office of Violence Against Women awarded a nearly $1 million grant to CPD in October 2020 in part to fund a U visa data dashboard. In an email, a CPD spokesperson said the dashboard “has not yet been created.” The department declined to say whether it would be able to meet the new reporting requirements.

Attorneys ask the mayor’s office for help

In late August, Olave, the legal project manager at the National Immigrant Justice Center, led a training session for Ternand, Poulos, and other CPD U visa certifying officers. Attorneys hoped that the training would stem the flow of flawed denials, according to emails obtained through a public records request. They were wrong.

“A lot of practitioners were waiting until the certifier training on August 25 in the hopes that things would get better,” Olave wrote in an email to Darci Flynn, Lightfoot’s director of gender-based violence strategy and policy, on September 13. “Unfortunately, it seems they have only gotten worse.”

Flynn forwarded the email to Elena Gottreich, Lightfoot’s deputy mayor of public safety, who sent it to CPD chief of staff Leslie Silletti and Tina Skahill, the department’s executive director of constitutional policing and reform. “This has been an issue for years, we need to address asap,” Gottreich wrote.

But the denials kept coming, the emails show. Attorneys began “advising clients to not apply for immigration relief based on a belief of an eventual denial from CPD,” according to an October 4 email to top CPD officials from Nubia Willman, the mayor’s chief community engagement officer and an immigration attorney with years of experience working on U visa applications.

The next day, Willman and other senior members of the administration met with CPD officials, including Skahill and general counsel Dana O’Malley, the emails show. Neither the mayor’s office nor CPD answered Injustice Watch’s questions about what happened at the meeting. 

But in a follow-up email to the meeting participants, Willman wrote, “For years, CPD has set best practices throughout the state for being responsive and trauma-informed towards survivors of crimes. I’m hopeful that this check-in will allow us to return to those processes.”

Still, the questionable denials kept coming, attorneys said. In an email sent to Willman on October 19, an immigration attorney wrote, “We received a second denial after I appealed the U cert[ification] denial to CPD—it’s very generic and does not even indicate that CPD reviewed my arguments.”

“Disheartening to see,” Willman wrote back. “We’re following up on these so feel free to send my way as we meet with CPD to discuss further. Hopefully we’ll have an update soon.”

By mid-November, sources told Injustice Watch, CPD started requiring that all denials would now go through its legal department before being finalized. The legal department also will review all appeals for denials already issued.

But Olave worries that some immigrants who were improperly denied a U visa certification request may not know that they can appeal the decision.

“There are definitely people out there who have gotten a denial over the past year who may just give up,” she said.

CPD did not respond to Injustice Watch’s questions about the policy changes.

The mayor’s office declined a request for an interview with Willman and Flynn. In a statement, a spokesperson for the mayor’s office said that when “concerns were raised to her office about U visa certification denials, the mayor ordered a review of the application process. The city will continue to work with advocates and the Chicago Police Department to provide any necessary adjustments to the policy or training to ensure appropriate access to this legal remedy and to ensure that we are living our values as a welcoming city in all ways.”

The long line ahead for U visa applicants

After receiving four denial letters, Zakirjonov, the truck driver who was stabbed last year, didn’t think he’d ever get a U visa certification from CPD.

Then late last month, three weeks after Injustice Watch asked CPD about his case, his lawyer received an unexpected letter from CPD. A year after being stabbed and robbed, Zakirjonov finally was certified for a U visa by CPD—even though he never appealed the fourth denial letter he received in September.

Zakirjonov had already given up hope that CPD would do right by him, he said, and had turned his attention to taking care of his pregnant wife and their two kids, ages seven and four. “To be honest, 99 percent of my focus and thinking was just to feed my family and live my life,” he said.

While he can finally apply for a U visa with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, CPD’s six-month delay puts him farther back in a line that is getting longer by the day.

By law, federal immigration officials can only give out 10,000 U visas to crime victims each year. USCIS said it has more than 180,000 pending cases, double the number in 2016. Between October 2021 and June 2022, the number of pending cases grew by more than 9,000, or about 34 a day.

“So an extra six months waiting to get your certification signed means potentially an extra few years waiting to get your case adjudicated,” Olave said.

The U visa grants legal status and a work permit for up to four years. To stay in the country for longer, immigrants must seek a green card. Three years after obtaining a U visa, recipients can apply for a green card, which currently takes another year or two to process.

One of Olave’s clients obtained her U visa last month after submitting her application more than six years ago. “We’re looking at her applying for a green card in November 2025,” Olave said. “Hopefully processing times don’t get longer, but it could be 2027 by the time she finally gets her green card. That’s over ten years since she applied for the U visa.”

Zakirjonov doesn’t know if he can wait that long, but he knows that’s all he can do at this point. “It’s draining, thinking about it every time,” he said. “So I’m just gonna let it go, and at some point, it’s gonna be yes or no.”


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CPD denied scores of undocumented crime victims a path to citizenship Read More »

CPD denied scores of undocumented crime victims a path to citizenshipCarlos Ballesteroson December 8, 2022 at 10:06 pm

This article was originally published by Injustice Watch, a nonpartisan, nonprofit journalism organization that conducts in-depth research exposing institutional failures that obstruct justice and equality.

After his brakes started acting up on I-94 one night last November, tractor-trailer driver Nodirjon Zakirjonov decided to pull over to the side of the road in the Pullman neighborhood to fix the problem. But in the middle of his repairs, the 30-year-old was suddenly struck on the head and knocked unconscious. When he came to, he felt his abdomen “burning.” He’d been stabbed and robbed.

The assault left the immigrant from Uzbekistan with a ten-inch scar across his torso and deeper trauma. For months, he struggled to drive long distances, and any slight mishap on the road triggered a panic attack. 

“I was living in a horror film,” he said in a recent interview.

Zakirjonov found it hard to talk about the assault, but eventually he confided in his friends, and one of them suggested that he apply for a U visa. 

A U visa offers temporary legal status and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who were victims of certain crimes and who are considered to be helpful or “likely to be helpful” to law enforcement. Congress created the visa program in 2000 to encourage undocumented immigrants to report crimes and help law enforcement better serve immigrant communities.

Zakirjonov immigrated to Chicago on a student visa but lost his legal status after graduating from Concordia University Chicago with a master’s degree in 2020. A few months after the assault, Zakirjonov contacted an immigration attorney to apply for a U visa. But before he could submit his application, he needed the Chicago Police Department to certify that he was indeed a qualified crime victim who had cooperated in their investigation. His lawyer, Julia Sverdloff, mailed his certification request to CPD in April. She was confident he’d get certified.

But what should have been a straight-forward process turned into a monthslong nightmare.

First, police officials said he needed to prove his identity. Then they told him that a detective had tried to reach him to no avail. After Zakirjonov sent a sworn affidavit promising to help investigators, CPD denied him a third time, telling him that he needed to call detectives and ask them to reopen his case. An open investigation isn’t a requirement for police to sign a U visa certification, but Zakirjonov did as he was told. He met with detectives in August, and they reopened his case. But CPD denied him again the next month, saying he didn’t have “credible and reliable information” about the crime.

“When I was informed in a straightforward way that CPD is not believing me, I said, ‘That’s all.’ That was the last shot,” he said.

An Injustice Watch investigation found that the department has denied hundreds of U visa certification requests from undocumented crime victims this year, many of them at odds with federal certification standards and some that appeared to violate state law.

Two Chicago police sergeants, Brandon Ternand and John Poulos, issued most of the denials reviewed by Injustice Watch. Both sergeants have fatally shot civilians and had serious questions raised by investigators about their credibility. Both also faced termination, but in 2018 the Chicago Police Board allowed them to keep their jobs. The city has paid out more than $3 million in settlements and judgments relating to the two sergeants.

Police watchdogs said the decision to designate Ternand and Poulos as U visa certifiers raises questions about CPD’s selection process for the job.

“To the extent that the Police Department has any interest in building its legitimacy or establishing public trust, you don’t put people who violated the most fundamental tenets of public trust and CPD rules . . . in positions in which their credibility [and] integrity matters,” said Craig Futterman, director of the Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project at the University of Chicago. “I can’t imagine anything more basic than that.”

Attorneys and legal advocates who regularly work on U visa applications called the number of denials by CPD in the last year “unprecedented” and said they worried it will discourage Chicago’s undocumented immigrants from reporting crimes.

“All it takes is one person that you know who had a negative encounter with law enforcement to affect your willingness to come forward in assisting in an investigation or prosecution of a crime,” said Trisha Teofilo Olave, a legal project manager at the Chicago-based National Immigrant Justice Center who represents dozens of U visa applicants.

Last month, after Injustice Watch started reporting this story and following weeks of complaints from immigration attorneys to officials in Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office, sources said that CPD said it would revise its policies on U visa certifications. The most significant change will require the department’s Office of Legal Affairs to review all denials as well as handle appeals of previously denied requests.

CPD did not answer any questions raised by Injustice Watch and did not respond to interview requests for Ternand and Poulos. Instead, the department issued a brief written statement in which it vowed to “continue working to ensure the U visa certification process is in accordance with the federal guidelines.”

Certifying officers ‘don’t understand the law’

Unlike many other law enforcement agencies, CPD said it doesn’t keep data on the number of U visa certification requests it receives or how many it denies. But in response to a public records request, department officials told Injustice Watch in October that CPD has denied “at least 800” U visa certifications in the last two years alone.

By comparison, in 2021, police in Los Angeles denied fewer than 350 certification requests and police in New York denied about 150 requests, according to data from those departments. Each of those two cities is home to at least 150,000 more undocumented immigrants than Chicago, recent estimates from each city show.

At Injustice Watch’s request, Chicago police reviewed a batch of recently closed certification cases—110 in all—and determined that 57 of those requests had been denied, a denial rate of nearly 52 percent. That would put Chicago well above other major cities—including New York, Los Angeles, Houston, Minneapolis, and San Francisco—in the percentage of requests denied, according to 2021 data from those departments.

The U visa program was created as part of larger legislation aimed at curbing human trafficking and violence against women. But many of the certifications denied by CPD have been for victims of the very crimes that qualify under the law—including domestic violence and sexual assault.

Leslye Orloff, an expert in U visas and director of the National Immigrant Women’s Advocacy Project at American University, reviewed the denials for Injustice Watch and found that many of those decisions ran contrary to federal certification guidelines.

Poulos and Ternand collectively signed more than three-quarters of the denial letters that CPD provided to Injustice Watch.

Orloff, who helped write the law that created the U visa and trains police departments nationwide on its implementation, concluded that the sergeants “don’t understand the law”—and called into question CPD’s monitoring of their work. “The fact that [the denials] are going out the door means that their supervising structure isn’t checking to see if they’re getting it right,” she said.

Despite the complaints from immigration attorneys, Ternand and Poulos remained U visa certifying officers as of late October, CPD records show.

Credit: Verónica Martinez

Before certifying U visas, Poulos and Ternand faced termination

The Chicago Police Department did not respond to questions about why Poulos and Ternand were assigned to Unit 163, the Records Inquiry Section that reviews U visa certification requests, following failed attempts to fire them.

Poulos, who is white, shot and killed two Black men in separate incidents in just over three years. In an off-duty incident in August 2013, Poulos said Rickey Rozelle, 28, threatened to kill him before Poulos shot him. Records show that investigators didn’t recover a weapon. The city later settled with Rozelle’s family for $950,000. While on duty in November 2016, authorities said Poulos fatally shot 19-year-old Kajuan Raye in the back during a foot chase. Oversight agencies cleared Poulos of wrongdoing in both shootings, but a jury awarded Raye’s family $1 million in a civil suit. Poulos claimed Raye pointed a gun at him, but forensics experts hired by both sides said in court filings that a gun in Raye’s possession was tucked away in his jacket pocket when Poulos shot him.

After Raye’s death, then-police superintendent Eddie Johnson filed charges to fire Poulos. But the charges had nothing to do with the shootings. Instead, they stemmed from two internal investigations from years earlier that found Poulos had concealed a past arrest when he applied to be an officer and had an ownership stake in his family’s sports bar once he got the job, a violation of CPD policy. Internal Affairs had recommended that Poulos be fired for those infractions in 2007, but police brass never followed through. By the time Johnson filed charges with the police board in 2017, Poulos had received a “merit promotion” to sergeant, according to the Tribune

In its 2017 report on CPD’s systemic failures in the wake of Laquan McDonald’s fatal shooting, the Justice Department singled out Poulos’ case for comment, saying CPD could have stopped his promotion—and potentially stopped him from killing Raye—if the department had a “functioning early intervention” system to alert officials of problem officers.

But in February 2018, the police board—chaired then by Lightfoot—unanimously ruled against firing Poulos, concluding that CPD took too long to bring the charges against him. Records show that Johnson designated Poulos as a U visa certifying officer in September 2018.

A few weeks later, the police board cleared Ternand of any wrongdoing in his fatal shooting of high school freshman Dakota Bright. During a foot chase in November 2012, Ternand, who is white, fired a single shot, hitting Bright in the back of the head. The officer said he saw the Black 15-year-old reach for a gun. But Bright was unarmed when Ternand shot him; police later recovered a gun 200 feet away from Bright’s body, WBEZ reported. The city’s police oversight agency ruled the shooting unjustified in 2017 after finding many “inconsistencies” in Ternand’s account.

However, in a five-three ruling that kept Ternand on the force, the police board said that his testimony was “credible and persuasive” and praised Ternand as a “highly decorated” officer who had a “reputation for honesty.”

That was despite the more than two dozen misconduct complaints Ternand had racked up in the years before and after killing Bright, including allegations that Ternand had lied in police reports about using excessive force. In one case, Cook County prosecutors declined to bring charges against a man whom Ternand said hit him after a CPD detective found bystander footage of the incident that contradicted Ternand’s police report, according to a civil lawsuit the man later filed.

Like most misconduct complaints against Chicago police officers, none of those complaints against Ternand were sustained. In all, Ternand was named in five lawsuits that cost Chicago taxpayers more than $1 million in settlements between 2011 and 2016, according to records collected by the Chicago Reporter.

After the police board saved his job, Ternand was transferred to the 11th District on the west side. Ternand was assigned to Unit 163 in January, and Superintendent David Brown designated him as a U visa certifying officer a month later.

Poulos and Ternand did not respond to a request for comment.

Former Chicago inspector general Joe Ferguson, who oversaw investigations of police policies and practices, told Injustice Watch that if CPD is going to keep Ternand and Poulos on the force, “they certainly should not be put into a position that involves their certification of official matters, for which their veracity and their credibility is critical.”

‘Looking for excuses to deny’

Not long after Ternand joined the U visa unit, some attorneys started noticing an uptick in denials of certification requests.

“Starting in April, we started noticing this trend where they were getting denied for no reason,” Shelby Vcelka, an immigration attorney with Victory Law Office in Berwyn, told Injustice Watch.

One of those denials was for Reyna Mariano, a 40-year-old, undocumented mother from Mexico whose teenage son was shot and killed in 2017. Under federal law, parents and other immediate family members of deceased minor victims of qualifying crimes can apply for a U visa as an “indirect victim.”

Mariano told Injustice Watch that at first she didn’t want to apply for a U visa because she felt guilty about “getting something out of” her son’s death. She decided to apply for the visa earlier this year because she believed obtaining legal status and a work permit would help her provide for her four-year-old daughter.

But Ternand denied her U visa certification request, saying without explanation that she didn’t qualify as an indirect victim. Vcelka appealed the denial, but Poulos denied her request again on the same grounds. Mariano was later granted certification from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted her son’s killing.

CPD also denied at least a dozen requests from domestic violence survivors this year, the Injustice Watch investigation found.

In one of those cases, a 43-year-old woman on the south side, who had obtained an order of protection against her former partner, called police after he threw her “onto the ground multiple times” according to a police report. Ternand denied her certification, saying she hadn’t suffered “substantial physical harm.” In another example, Ternand denied a request from a 23-year-old woman who told police she locked herself in her room as her knife-wielding father tried to open the door while shouting threats to kill her.  Again, Ternand said the woman hadn’t suffered substantial harm.

But federal certification guidelines issued by the Department of Homeland Security say that it’s up to immigration officials—not local law enforcement—to determine if U visa applicants have suffered enough harm to qualify for the visa.

“The fact that they’re denying based on substantial harm is totally wrong,” Orloff said. “Denying based on substantial harm, to me, says that they’re looking for excuses to deny that the law doesn’t require.”

Poulos also denied at least six certification requests because, he said, the crimes listed on the police report—“simple assault-domestic” and “simple battery-domestic”—weren’t qualifying crimes.

“That’s wrong—‘Simple assault–domestic related’ is domestic violence,” Orloff said. “Each of these officers are doing things that are dead wrong on the law.”

Immigration attorneys said it makes sense for CPD to deny some of the hundreds of U visa certification requests it receives every year. 

“It shouldn’t be a rubber stamp. Not everyone should get a certification,” said attorney Carlos Becerra. “But I think the other extreme is denying certifications and having either a very flimsy basis for doing it or having no basis.”

Becerra sued CPD last month after Ternand denied a U visa certification for one of his clients, a rideshare driver who was attacked by a passenger, leaving him with a broken nose, according to the lawsuit. Ternand denied the man twice for allegedly failing to cooperate in the investigation, even though he “provided evidence that the case had [been] reopened,” the lawsuit says.

In 2017, a report by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights found that law enforcement agencies across the state had inconsistent policies on U visa certification that often conflicted with federal guidelines.

The following year, the Illinois General Assembly passed the VOICES Act, which set statewide guidelines on U visa certifications. The law requires law enforcement agencies to recertify U visa applicants whose initial certification had expired. Under federal law, the certifications expire after six months, but immigrants and their lawyers often need more time than that to file their U visa applications.

CPD, however, denied several recertification requests this year, including one for a woman who was sexually assaulted as a minor, according to attorneys and records reviewed by Injustice Watch.

In 2021, Governor. J.B. Pritzker signed additional legislation requiring law enforcement agencies statewide to report the number of U visa certification requests they’ve received and approved or denied each year. The first of those reports is due in March. The Justice Department’s Office of Violence Against Women awarded a nearly $1 million grant to CPD in October 2020 in part to fund a U visa data dashboard. In an email, a CPD spokesperson said the dashboard “has not yet been created.” The department declined to say whether it would be able to meet the new reporting requirements.

Attorneys ask the mayor’s office for help

In late August, Olave, the legal project manager at the National Immigrant Justice Center, led a training session for Ternand, Poulos, and other CPD U visa certifying officers. Attorneys hoped that the training would stem the flow of flawed denials, according to emails obtained through a public records request. They were wrong.

“A lot of practitioners were waiting until the certifier training on August 25 in the hopes that things would get better,” Olave wrote in an email to Darci Flynn, Lightfoot’s director of gender-based violence strategy and policy, on September 13. “Unfortunately, it seems they have only gotten worse.”

Flynn forwarded the email to Elena Gottreich, Lightfoot’s deputy mayor of public safety, who sent it to CPD chief of staff Leslie Silletti and Tina Skahill, the department’s executive director of constitutional policing and reform. “This has been an issue for years, we need to address asap,” Gottreich wrote.

But the denials kept coming, the emails show. Attorneys began “advising clients to not apply for immigration relief based on a belief of an eventual denial from CPD,” according to an October 4 email to top CPD officials from Nubia Willman, the mayor’s chief community engagement officer and an immigration attorney with years of experience working on U visa applications.

The next day, Willman and other senior members of the administration met with CPD officials, including Skahill and general counsel Dana O’Malley, the emails show. Neither the mayor’s office nor CPD answered Injustice Watch’s questions about what happened at the meeting. 

But in a follow-up email to the meeting participants, Willman wrote, “For years, CPD has set best practices throughout the state for being responsive and trauma-informed towards survivors of crimes. I’m hopeful that this check-in will allow us to return to those processes.”

Still, the questionable denials kept coming, attorneys said. In an email sent to Willman on October 19, an immigration attorney wrote, “We received a second denial after I appealed the U cert[ification] denial to CPD—it’s very generic and does not even indicate that CPD reviewed my arguments.”

“Disheartening to see,” Willman wrote back. “We’re following up on these so feel free to send my way as we meet with CPD to discuss further. Hopefully we’ll have an update soon.”

By mid-November, sources told Injustice Watch, CPD started requiring that all denials would now go through its legal department before being finalized. The legal department also will review all appeals for denials already issued.

But Olave worries that some immigrants who were improperly denied a U visa certification request may not know that they can appeal the decision.

“There are definitely people out there who have gotten a denial over the past year who may just give up,” she said.

CPD did not respond to Injustice Watch’s questions about the policy changes.

The mayor’s office declined a request for an interview with Willman and Flynn. In a statement, a spokesperson for the mayor’s office said that when “concerns were raised to her office about U visa certification denials, the mayor ordered a review of the application process. The city will continue to work with advocates and the Chicago Police Department to provide any necessary adjustments to the policy or training to ensure appropriate access to this legal remedy and to ensure that we are living our values as a welcoming city in all ways.”

The long line ahead for U visa applicants

After receiving four denial letters, Zakirjonov, the truck driver who was stabbed last year, didn’t think he’d ever get a U visa certification from CPD.

Then late last month, three weeks after Injustice Watch asked CPD about his case, his lawyer received an unexpected letter from CPD. A year after being stabbed and robbed, Zakirjonov finally was certified for a U visa by CPD—even though he never appealed the fourth denial letter he received in September.

Zakirjonov had already given up hope that CPD would do right by him, he said, and had turned his attention to taking care of his pregnant wife and their two kids, ages seven and four. “To be honest, 99 percent of my focus and thinking was just to feed my family and live my life,” he said.

While he can finally apply for a U visa with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, CPD’s six-month delay puts him farther back in a line that is getting longer by the day.

By law, federal immigration officials can only give out 10,000 U visas to crime victims each year. USCIS said it has more than 180,000 pending cases, double the number in 2016. Between October 2021 and June 2022, the number of pending cases grew by more than 9,000, or about 34 a day.

“So an extra six months waiting to get your certification signed means potentially an extra few years waiting to get your case adjudicated,” Olave said.

The U visa grants legal status and a work permit for up to four years. To stay in the country for longer, immigrants must seek a green card. Three years after obtaining a U visa, recipients can apply for a green card, which currently takes another year or two to process.

One of Olave’s clients obtained her U visa last month after submitting her application more than six years ago. “We’re looking at her applying for a green card in November 2025,” Olave said. “Hopefully processing times don’t get longer, but it could be 2027 by the time she finally gets her green card. That’s over ten years since she applied for the U visa.”

Zakirjonov doesn’t know if he can wait that long, but he knows that’s all he can do at this point. “It’s draining, thinking about it every time,” he said. “So I’m just gonna let it go, and at some point, it’s gonna be yes or no.”


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CPD denied scores of undocumented crime victims a path to citizenshipCarlos Ballesteroson December 8, 2022 at 10:06 pm Read More »

Jesse Sandvik, DJ and booker at the California Clipper

Among the local venues to fall victim to the COVID-19 pandemic in its first terrible year was beloved Bucktown dance spot Danny’s Tavern. The bar had been home to several popular DJ nights, including Night Moves, a cosmic disco monthly that ended its 12-year run (after a few lineup changes) hosted by Ross Kelly and Jesse Sandvik, aka Jesse Sandwich. Sandvik, a 42-year-old DJ and producer, also runs boutique dance label Areaman, and since the demise of Danny’s he’s begun booking DJs at the California Clipper, a jewel in Humboldt Park’s crown that’s also known for its eclectic, Americana-inflected live music and variety shows. The Clipper was almost lost to the pandemic too, but it reopened in February 2022 under new management and has quickly become one of the city’s most reliable nightlife spots. Sandvik is responsible for the club’s diverse and exciting lineups of innovative DJs—and the return of Night Moves in January 2023.

As told to Micco Caporale

I’m originally from Ithaca, New York. I moved to Chicago about 18 years ago. I had visited several times driving cross-country, and the music, art, and culture here just sunk its claws into me. I had spent a lot of time in New York, in and around Brooklyn, but the energy here felt a lot more my speed. 

The records I grew up listening to had a really lasting impact on me. Dizzy on the French Riviera, the Jazz Messengers, John Coltrane . . . I can remember my father playing Booker T.’s “Green Onions” really early on a weekend when all I wanted to do was sleep, and now that’s some of my favorite music. I grew up in the MTV era, and hearing those records—maybe doing some work downstairs or cleaning—that was my first experience of vinyl as a doorway into unknown worlds. 

In my teens, I was into punk and hip-hop, so those records got me interested in how that instrumental music gets made. I had a notebook for tracking samples of things I wanted. You know, side A, first track: drums. Side B, track three: bass. Stuff like that. I went through all my dad’s records and did this. Even though I didn’t have a sampler, I’d assembled a pretty large binder of all this sample material. When I was 19, I dropped out of college and moved in with some friends, one of whom was a producer, and I finally got to record all those samples and start making my own music. And then I got to travel and see what was out there, because of that music.

When I moved here at 24, I’d only been to Chicago three times, and every time left me wanting to see and hear more. I’d just get blown away every time I visited, whether it was seeing Jeff Parker or hitting Danny’s. There’s always so much happening here, and it felt like a warm, inviting environment full of opportunity.

New York struck me as expensive. In Chicago, it seemed like there was more intention behind things, because it’s more affordable. People have more space and time to cultivate what they’re doing, instead of being stuck in the rush and hustle of New York.

I was doing a lot of construction work when I moved here. I was actually interested in object and furniture design and party installations, so I started throwing parties. We were doing loft parties, creating these now-called “immersive” environments: a zombie disco on Pluto or the wreckage of a sunken cruise ship. One time we built a DJ booth in a mouth. Those parties let me incorporate art and music together, and I got to work with a lot of talented artists in Chicago.

I got interested in DJing mainly through Kevin Stacy at Danny’s. He asked me to come in and open up DJing on a Saturday night. I had never DJed before. I was like, “No way, I don’t know how to do that. I just listen to records.” We’d talked a lot about music before, so he said, “Don’t worry. I’ll show you what to do.” Once I experienced filling up a quiet room on a Saturday night with people and music, I was hooked, and Danny’s let me cut my DJ teeth.

That first night, I remember being really nervous and super focused on bringing the right records. I’d already spent a few years just going to Danny’s and enjoying the music, but I never expected to DJ there. Still, in my head, I already kind of knew what I’d play if I did: 60s and 70s instrumentals and loungy jazz music, Burt Bacharach, surf rock. Things along the lines of Booker T. & the M.G.’s! But more campy, maybe. There are these records called Persuasive Percussion—like, really produced studio albums that were built for people to listen to on their hi-fis at home. I played some of that stuff because it has a big rush of sound to it, and I felt like it fit in the space really well, especially in the more relaxed earlier hours of Saturday or Sunday at Danny’s. 

The March 2021 debut release from Jesse Sandvik’s Areaman label, by Jeremiah Meece of The-Drum and Clique Talk

For a few years, I kept playing this atmospheric stuff at Danny’s. I don’t think I had the confidence to, say, captain the ship of a really busy dance floor. So I was able to kind of find my sound and build my confidence and practice mixing songs. 

I heard a lot of DJs there. Some of my favorites were the Night Moves crew, which was Brandon [Walsh], Yolanda [Carmina Alvarez], and Ross [Kelly]. A year or two after hearing them, they asked me to do a guest night. I was thrilled. Eventually, that lineup changed to just Brandon and Ross, and then Brandon moved. In 2015, Ross invited me to be an official Night Moves DJ, and we did that together for about five years until Danny’s closed.

Night Moves really focused on Italo disco, cosmic disco, Balearic disco. . . . Balearic disco is a late-80s genre of music from Ibiza—kind of a chill house style, sort of postdisco bossa nova, more downtempo. Music you listen to watching sunrises on the beach. It’s really pretty and ethereal. We’d play some of that stuff earlier in the night, then build towards that Italo sound or things like Sylvester’s “I Need Somebody to Love Tonight.” By the late evening, we’d progress to all things disco, but really focusing on Italo boogie, boogie funk, house, acid house, even some of the old WBMX classics you’d hear on Chicago radio, like Mr. Master.

As a DJ, I think having access to a lot of inspiration and mentors in Chicago gave me an example of finding my own voice or style. That’s very important to me. Being eclectic and dynamic is enjoyable to me. People like Mark Grusane, Nosha Luv, Darren Jones, Jeff White, and Brandon and Ross from Night Moves . . . there are so many DJs, it’s hard to mention, but those in particular really gave me a sense of listening differently and playing differently, even when it comes to approaching another DJ. 

Like, maybe someone is playing something that I’m really into, and I ask them about it. Instead of telling me the exact track, they might tell me what label it’s on or who the artist is. That creates a path where I can find all this other music by these other artists until I arrive at my own song that speaks to me within the realm of that track.

That’s a big point of contention these days, especially with vinyl collectors and vinyl DJs. I’m not sure people understand that. There are some people making a career for themselves by finding records that nobody else has taken the time, patience, or dedication to find. It gives them an element of mystique. There’s so much recorded music that exists on tape—even unreleased music or vinyl that’s not on the Internet. Chicago has a lot of DJs that specialize in that. If someone doesn’t want to give you a track, it doesn’t always mean they’re trying to be rude. They’re trying to encourage the magic and beauty of a DJ who can take you to an audio world you don’t know how to find. They want you to wonder and explore.

“Like, be serious about your craft, but the overall attitude or promotion of an image can get way too serious for me,” says Jesse Sandvik. “So I like to be more lighthearted.” Credit: Liina Raud

Playfulness is really important in my sets, so I like having a kind of comical name. I think people in the DJ world often take themselves too seriously. Like, be serious about your craft, but the overall attitude or promotion of an image can get way too serious for me, personally. So I like to be more lighthearted.

My first DJ name was DJ Smooth & Delicious, but in a way, I’ve always been Jesse Sandwich. I mean, Sandvik, Sandwich . . . yeah. I don’t know when that name officially occurred, but food and flavor have always been part of my musical journey. I love to cook, and I love music. And there’s a body experience to both. You’ve really got to absorb them.

I’ve always been obsessed with finding new flavors and trying recipes, the same way I’ve always been into finding new sounds. I like the tactile search for ingredients, which I think is similar to my fascination with record hunting. Both food and music engage multiple senses. Like, music goes beyond listening. It really triggers emotions for people, and you can physically feel it. Deaf people can still sense music, even if they’re not “hearing” it. I think of what I do as, like, layering and sandwiching different songs or genres together to create a certain flavor or experience. DJ Jesse Sandwich.

I worked in hospitality for a long time, from being a line cook to a server. Then I got more into the bar side of things. I worked my way up from being a busboy and food runner to being a manager and a bartender at Big Star, and that kind of overlapped with more of a dive into DJing and music. The Boogie Munsters were a big influence, and Tim at Star Creature Universal Vibrations, as well as Shazam Bangles and Constance K, got me into this more deep boogie, funk, disco, and house kind of vibe, which led me to meet DJs from both the north and south sides. 

Then Tim asked if I would be interested in doing some work for Star Creature—mainly shipping and inventory stuff—so I did that on the side after I became disenchanted with hospitality. I also did a lot of work with Numero Group, so I’ve been fortunate to learn and grow from two influential Chicago labels, especially during the pandemic.

The 1980 B side “Up” by Infinity, one of Jesse Sandvik’s favorite tracks

When the Clipper was preparing to reopen, Kristina Magro [from new owner the Orbit Group] asked if I would be interested in booking DJs there on Fridays and Saturdays. I was curious if they had more programming available, so now I work on putting together playlists for all their businesses and consulting for their sound systems. 

As a booker, I’m really interested in highlighting not just Chicago music history but Humboldt Park’s history. There’s music all around you there, constantly. If you just walk through the park on any weekend, you’re going to hear people playing music out of their cars or hanging out and barbecuing to music or just enjoying a live show in the park. So bringing some of that sensibility into the California Clipper is really important to me—having bands playing Puerto Rican-style music as well as having DJs who are able to honor that tradition. But I also want the California Clipper to be a place for dynamic dance music. It’s about being able to connect to that kind of unifying sense of joy that happens on the dance floor, regardless of the genre or where in the city the DJ is from.

At the Clipper, we’ve put together something really special and intentional. It’s something I’ve always dreamed of, and I’m just so happy that Kristina and the rest of Orbit Group ownership supported that vision. People need an intimate space to dance and get together, and they deserve to do that with a sound system that is nice and enjoyable. We have a DJ booth that’s permanent and beautiful and part of the architecture of the space, and the room sounds incredible. We’re really lucky how it all came together.

Related


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A eulogy for Danny’s Tavern

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Jesse Sandvik, DJ and booker at the California Clipper Read More »

Jesse Sandvik, DJ and booker at the California ClipperMicco Caporaleon December 8, 2022 at 7:42 pm

Among the local venues to fall victim to the COVID-19 pandemic in its first terrible year was beloved Bucktown dance spot Danny’s Tavern. The bar had been home to several popular DJ nights, including Night Moves, a cosmic disco monthly that ended its 12-year run (after a few lineup changes) hosted by Ross Kelly and Jesse Sandvik, aka Jesse Sandwich. Sandvik, a 42-year-old DJ and producer, also runs boutique dance label Areaman, and since the demise of Danny’s he’s begun booking DJs at the California Clipper, a jewel in Humboldt Park’s crown that’s also known for its eclectic, Americana-inflected live music and variety shows. The Clipper was almost lost to the pandemic too, but it reopened in February 2022 under new management and has quickly become one of the city’s most reliable nightlife spots. Sandvik is responsible for the club’s diverse and exciting lineups of innovative DJs—and the return of Night Moves in January 2023.

As told to Micco Caporale

I’m originally from Ithaca, New York. I moved to Chicago about 18 years ago. I had visited several times driving cross-country, and the music, art, and culture here just sunk its claws into me. I had spent a lot of time in New York, in and around Brooklyn, but the energy here felt a lot more my speed. 

The records I grew up listening to had a really lasting impact on me. Dizzy on the French Riviera, the Jazz Messengers, John Coltrane . . . I can remember my father playing Booker T.’s “Green Onions” really early on a weekend when all I wanted to do was sleep, and now that’s some of my favorite music. I grew up in the MTV era, and hearing those records—maybe doing some work downstairs or cleaning—that was my first experience of vinyl as a doorway into unknown worlds. 

In my teens, I was into punk and hip-hop, so those records got me interested in how that instrumental music gets made. I had a notebook for tracking samples of things I wanted. You know, side A, first track: drums. Side B, track three: bass. Stuff like that. I went through all my dad’s records and did this. Even though I didn’t have a sampler, I’d assembled a pretty large binder of all this sample material. When I was 19, I dropped out of college and moved in with some friends, one of whom was a producer, and I finally got to record all those samples and start making my own music. And then I got to travel and see what was out there, because of that music.

When I moved here at 24, I’d only been to Chicago three times, and every time left me wanting to see and hear more. I’d just get blown away every time I visited, whether it was seeing Jeff Parker or hitting Danny’s. There’s always so much happening here, and it felt like a warm, inviting environment full of opportunity.

New York struck me as expensive. In Chicago, it seemed like there was more intention behind things, because it’s more affordable. People have more space and time to cultivate what they’re doing, instead of being stuck in the rush and hustle of New York.

I was doing a lot of construction work when I moved here. I was actually interested in object and furniture design and party installations, so I started throwing parties. We were doing loft parties, creating these now-called “immersive” environments: a zombie disco on Pluto or the wreckage of a sunken cruise ship. One time we built a DJ booth in a mouth. Those parties let me incorporate art and music together, and I got to work with a lot of talented artists in Chicago.

I got interested in DJing mainly through Kevin Stacy at Danny’s. He asked me to come in and open up DJing on a Saturday night. I had never DJed before. I was like, “No way, I don’t know how to do that. I just listen to records.” We’d talked a lot about music before, so he said, “Don’t worry. I’ll show you what to do.” Once I experienced filling up a quiet room on a Saturday night with people and music, I was hooked, and Danny’s let me cut my DJ teeth.

That first night, I remember being really nervous and super focused on bringing the right records. I’d already spent a few years just going to Danny’s and enjoying the music, but I never expected to DJ there. Still, in my head, I already kind of knew what I’d play if I did: 60s and 70s instrumentals and loungy jazz music, Burt Bacharach, surf rock. Things along the lines of Booker T. & the M.G.’s! But more campy, maybe. There are these records called Persuasive Percussion—like, really produced studio albums that were built for people to listen to on their hi-fis at home. I played some of that stuff because it has a big rush of sound to it, and I felt like it fit in the space really well, especially in the more relaxed earlier hours of Saturday or Sunday at Danny’s. 

The March 2021 debut release from Jesse Sandvik’s Areaman label, by Jeremiah Meece of The-Drum and Clique Talk

For a few years, I kept playing this atmospheric stuff at Danny’s. I don’t think I had the confidence to, say, captain the ship of a really busy dance floor. So I was able to kind of find my sound and build my confidence and practice mixing songs. 

I heard a lot of DJs there. Some of my favorites were the Night Moves crew, which was Brandon [Walsh], Yolanda [Carmina Alvarez], and Ross [Kelly]. A year or two after hearing them, they asked me to do a guest night. I was thrilled. Eventually, that lineup changed to just Brandon and Ross, and then Brandon moved. In 2015, Ross invited me to be an official Night Moves DJ, and we did that together for about five years until Danny’s closed.

Night Moves really focused on Italo disco, cosmic disco, Balearic disco. . . . Balearic disco is a late-80s genre of music from Ibiza—kind of a chill house style, sort of postdisco bossa nova, more downtempo. Music you listen to watching sunrises on the beach. It’s really pretty and ethereal. We’d play some of that stuff earlier in the night, then build towards that Italo sound or things like Sylvester’s “I Need Somebody to Love Tonight.” By the late evening, we’d progress to all things disco, but really focusing on Italo boogie, boogie funk, house, acid house, even some of the old WBMX classics you’d hear on Chicago radio, like Mr. Master.

As a DJ, I think having access to a lot of inspiration and mentors in Chicago gave me an example of finding my own voice or style. That’s very important to me. Being eclectic and dynamic is enjoyable to me. People like Mark Grusane, Nosha Luv, Darren Jones, Jeff White, and Brandon and Ross from Night Moves . . . there are so many DJs, it’s hard to mention, but those in particular really gave me a sense of listening differently and playing differently, even when it comes to approaching another DJ. 

Like, maybe someone is playing something that I’m really into, and I ask them about it. Instead of telling me the exact track, they might tell me what label it’s on or who the artist is. That creates a path where I can find all this other music by these other artists until I arrive at my own song that speaks to me within the realm of that track.

That’s a big point of contention these days, especially with vinyl collectors and vinyl DJs. I’m not sure people understand that. There are some people making a career for themselves by finding records that nobody else has taken the time, patience, or dedication to find. It gives them an element of mystique. There’s so much recorded music that exists on tape—even unreleased music or vinyl that’s not on the Internet. Chicago has a lot of DJs that specialize in that. If someone doesn’t want to give you a track, it doesn’t always mean they’re trying to be rude. They’re trying to encourage the magic and beauty of a DJ who can take you to an audio world you don’t know how to find. They want you to wonder and explore.

“Like, be serious about your craft, but the overall attitude or promotion of an image can get way too serious for me,” says Jesse Sandvik. “So I like to be more lighthearted.” Credit: Liina Raud

Playfulness is really important in my sets, so I like having a kind of comical name. I think people in the DJ world often take themselves too seriously. Like, be serious about your craft, but the overall attitude or promotion of an image can get way too serious for me, personally. So I like to be more lighthearted.

My first DJ name was DJ Smooth & Delicious, but in a way, I’ve always been Jesse Sandwich. I mean, Sandvik, Sandwich . . . yeah. I don’t know when that name officially occurred, but food and flavor have always been part of my musical journey. I love to cook, and I love music. And there’s a body experience to both. You’ve really got to absorb them.

I’ve always been obsessed with finding new flavors and trying recipes, the same way I’ve always been into finding new sounds. I like the tactile search for ingredients, which I think is similar to my fascination with record hunting. Both food and music engage multiple senses. Like, music goes beyond listening. It really triggers emotions for people, and you can physically feel it. Deaf people can still sense music, even if they’re not “hearing” it. I think of what I do as, like, layering and sandwiching different songs or genres together to create a certain flavor or experience. DJ Jesse Sandwich.

I worked in hospitality for a long time, from being a line cook to a server. Then I got more into the bar side of things. I worked my way up from being a busboy and food runner to being a manager and a bartender at Big Star, and that kind of overlapped with more of a dive into DJing and music. The Boogie Munsters were a big influence, and Tim at Star Creature Universal Vibrations, as well as Shazam Bangles and Constance K, got me into this more deep boogie, funk, disco, and house kind of vibe, which led me to meet DJs from both the north and south sides. 

Then Tim asked if I would be interested in doing some work for Star Creature—mainly shipping and inventory stuff—so I did that on the side after I became disenchanted with hospitality. I also did a lot of work with Numero Group, so I’ve been fortunate to learn and grow from two influential Chicago labels, especially during the pandemic.

The 1980 B side “Up” by Infinity, one of Jesse Sandvik’s favorite tracks

When the Clipper was preparing to reopen, Kristina Magro [from new owner the Orbit Group] asked if I would be interested in booking DJs there on Fridays and Saturdays. I was curious if they had more programming available, so now I work on putting together playlists for all their businesses and consulting for their sound systems. 

As a booker, I’m really interested in highlighting not just Chicago music history but Humboldt Park’s history. There’s music all around you there, constantly. If you just walk through the park on any weekend, you’re going to hear people playing music out of their cars or hanging out and barbecuing to music or just enjoying a live show in the park. So bringing some of that sensibility into the California Clipper is really important to me—having bands playing Puerto Rican-style music as well as having DJs who are able to honor that tradition. But I also want the California Clipper to be a place for dynamic dance music. It’s about being able to connect to that kind of unifying sense of joy that happens on the dance floor, regardless of the genre or where in the city the DJ is from.

At the Clipper, we’ve put together something really special and intentional. It’s something I’ve always dreamed of, and I’m just so happy that Kristina and the rest of Orbit Group ownership supported that vision. People need an intimate space to dance and get together, and they deserve to do that with a sound system that is nice and enjoyable. We have a DJ booth that’s permanent and beautiful and part of the architecture of the space, and the room sounds incredible. We’re really lucky how it all came together.

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Jesse Sandvik, DJ and booker at the California ClipperMicco Caporaleon December 8, 2022 at 7:42 pm Read More »