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Delta variant of COVID-19 ready to ravage unvaccinated in Illinois: ā€˜Some areas are going to blow up’on June 30, 2021 at 10:28 pm

Nearly 16 months into the pandemic, COVID-19 is still finding insidious new ways to invade and devastate the human body.

Front of mind for public health officials in Chicago and beyond is the Delta variant of the coronavirus, which already accounts for more than 20% of new cases across the United States and ā€œis likely to be our dominant strain here in the next couple of months,ā€ according to Chicago Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady.

Overall case counts have bottomed out across Illinois as 69% of eligible residents have gotten at least one vaccine dose, but Gov. J.B. Pritzker is pleading for remaining unvaccinated residents to get a life-saving jab because Delta surges in other countries ā€œare a harbinger of what could happen here.ā€

It’s hard to say how bad a wave of Delta variant cases could get, but experts say the solution is simple: Get more shots into arms.

Here’s a quick rundown of the latest focus of the pandemic, why experts are so concerned about it, and what it means for Illinois residents:

Where did the Delta variant come from?

It was termed the B.1.617.2 variant when it was first detected late last year in India, where it now makes up the vast majority of cases in that nation’s ongoing, devastating surge.

It’s one of the thousands of variants that form through genetic mutation while the virus has replicated billions of times, according to Dr. Michael Angarone, an associate professor of medicine and infectious disease specialist at Northwestern Medicine.

ā€œAs they replicate, that genetic material makes mistakes. It’s like if you type too fast, you’re going to miss a letter,ā€ Angarone said.

Why is it dangerous?

Most variants are inconsequential, but some — like Delta — have proven to spread more easily. That’s what landed it on the list of several ā€œvariants of concernā€ highlighted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Delta variant is unique because its so-called spike proteins allow it to more strongly latch onto cells in the respiratory and circulatory systems, Angarone said.

The previously identified U.K. variant of the virus, which now makes up the majority of cases in the U.S., was about twice as infectious as the original form of the virus that swept the globe. The Delta variant could be up to 60% more infectious on top of that.

ā€œIt spreads so easily, even potentially outdoors,ā€ said University of Chicago epidemiologist Dr. Emily Landon. ā€œIt’s a huge problem for unvaccinated individuals.ā€

Angarone said experts are most concerned about a variant springing from a variant, which hasn’t yet happened on a large scale. ā€œThat’s when you start to get big changes in how the virus operates — can it bypass the vaccine immunity?ā€

So do COVID-19 vaccines protect against the Delta variant?

Yes, though they’re slightly less effective against it. Research has shown the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are about 88% effective in preventing Delta cases, compared to 95% efficacy against the original strain of the virus. Another study suggested a similarly slight decrease in effectiveness for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

ā€œEither way, the vaccines are still going to help protect people from ending up in the hospital,ā€ Landon said.

Does the Delta variant make people more sick?

Some research has suggested the strain causes more severe symptoms and potentially a new one — hearing loss — but that’s still being studied.

How many Delta cases have been detected in Illinois?

The Illinois Department of Public Health has identified 103 cases, but that’s only a sliver of the actual total. Just a small fraction of positive cases are evaluated to see if they’re a variant case. From that figure, experts can extrapolate that there are ā€œway more cases,ā€ Landon said, likely thousands.

ā€œThe question is, will it take a foothold? Probably, among unvaccinated individuals,ā€ she said.

I’m fully vaccinated. Should I be worried?

Probably not, unless you’re in a largely unvaccinated community that sees a severe outbreak.

That means it’s unlikely there’ll be a massive statewide surge in cases like the early months of the pandemic, not to mention the vicious resurgence Illinois suffered last fall.

Dr. Emily Landon of the University of Chicago.
Dr. Emily Landon of the University of Chicago.
Cortesia

ā€œThe vaccines are the walls that keep things contained,ā€ Landon said. ā€œBut can one community become completely decimated by the Delta variant, in a neighborhood, in a church? Absolutely. Some areas are going to blow up. Will it overwhelm our health care system? Probably not.ā€

Angarone said even with the dangerous variants, COVID-19 will more likely end up ā€œkind of like influenza, with a substantial number of people who get really sick, but nowhere near what we saw in early and mid periods of the pandemic.ā€

ā€œWhat’s probably going to happen is we have enough immunity to protect most people, but see patches of outbreaks. But this pandemic has taught us that our crystal ball predictions are often wrong,ā€ Angarone said.

How the Delta virus plays out in the U.K. over the next few weeks ā€œwill be telling,ā€ he added.

I’ve already recovered from COVID-19. Should I be worried?

Very much so, if you’re not vaccinated. ā€œThese specific variants are especially suited to overcome immunity from a recovery,ā€ Landon warned. ā€œYou’re certainly less protected.ā€

Does this mean I should keep masking up, even though the CDC has said it’s generally OK for fully vaccinated people to go maskless?

You’re not required to in Chicago or elsewhere in Illinois in most situations — but it couldn’t hurt.

The World Health Organization updated its guidance last week recommending vaccinated people keep wearing masks to help stem the Delta spread, but Arwady, Chicago’s health commissioner, said the city is sticking with the looser CDC guidelines because the virus is ā€œin very good control locally, even with the Delta here.ā€

Landon said there’s ā€œno black and white when it comes to prevention, but if we all wore masks inside, it would be much less likely to spread. I think wearing masks inside would be prudent right now. It’s probably not essential, but I wouldn’t throw away your mask yet. Keep thinking about your fellow man.ā€

What else should I do to help keep the Delta variant at bay?

The golden rules of the pandemic still stand.

ā€œWe have to use our sense of what we’re doing and who we’re going to be around,ā€ Angarone said. ā€œWearing a mask and keeping distance — it’s still very helpful and will apply until we get this completely under control. And our most powerful tool is getting more people vaccinated.ā€

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Delta variant of COVID-19 ready to ravage unvaccinated in Illinois: ā€˜Some areas are going to blow up’on June 30, 2021 at 10:28 pm Read More Ā»

Josh Donaldson lashes back at Lucas Giolito, Ozzie Guillenon June 30, 2021 at 10:34 pm

Lucas Giolito took issue with Josh Donaldson’s antics as he crossed home plate after hitting a home run against him Tuesday night.

On Wednesday, Donaldson fired back against the White Sox right-hander. He even had some spicy words for Sox TV postgame host Ozzie Guillen.

ā€œHe calls me classless,ā€ Donaldson said of Giolito. ā€œI didn’t think I was showing him up during the game. I was talking to my bench.ā€

Donaldson appeared to yell ā€œIt’s not sticky anymoreā€ while rubbing his hands together as he crossed the plate, an obvious dig at Giolito in the wake of Major League Baseball’s crackdown on pitchers’ use of sticky substances. Donaldson has been outspoken about pithers using it for some time.

ā€œHe’s a [bleeping] pest,ā€ Giolito said after the Sox’ 7-6 win Tuesday, in which Giolito pitched six-plus innings of three-run ball to earn the win. ā€œThat’s kind of a classless move. If you’re going to talk s—, talk s— to my face. Don’t go across home plate and do all that, just come to me.ā€

Donaldson said he later talked face to face with Giolito and said Giolito didn’t say much to him.

ā€œHe said he thought it was annoying,ā€ Donaldson said. ā€œI said, ā€˜So what? I’m on the opposing team. What do you care about me? I’m in your face, I’m telling you what I think. What do you have to say about that?ā€

Donaldson said Giolito didn’t respond.

During the postgame show on NBC Sports Chicago Tuesday, Guillen said the Sox should throw at Donaldson. On Wednesday, Donaldson took issue, going so far as to mention Guillen’s career numbers and Guillen’s comments about Fidel Castro in 2012.

ā€œAnd I got Ozzie Guillen talking s— on the air saying that, ā€˜I’d let one go, hit him in the ribs,’ ā€ Donaldson said. ā€œOzzie Guillen, you were a career .700 OPS hitter, man. You were a three-time All-Star and you had an under .700 OPS. My worst season in the big leagues is 150 points higher than that. This is also coming from the man that said he loves Fidel Castro. That’s who we’re taking advice from? What are we doing around here?

ā€œHey, I’m trying to make the game fair. I didn’t make the rules.ā€

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Josh Donaldson lashes back at Lucas Giolito, Ozzie Guillenon June 30, 2021 at 10:34 pm Read More Ā»

Lightfoot’s troubles put her under harsh spotlight — as office she holds becomes shadow of what it wason June 30, 2021 at 10:40 pm

Rahm Emanuel liked to say there are five chief executive jobs in the nation worth holding: president; governor of California or New York; and mayor of New York or Chicago.

After his successor’s recent losing streak, Emanuel might want to cross mayor of Chicago off that list.

At a time when Lori Lightfoot appears most vulnerable to a potential re-election challenge, the once all-powerful job that made Richard J. Daley a kingmaker has — or is about to — become a shadow of what it was.

Chicago’s mayor will still wear the jacket for Chicago Public Schools. But a Chicago Teachers Union with expanded bargaining rights and a 21-member elected school board — both approved by the Illinois General Assembly over Lightfoot’s strenuous objections — will make it more difficult, it not impossible, for the mayor to make the changes voters demand.

The same goes for violent crime and the Chicago Police Department. There is no more stalling the civilian oversight board recommended by the Task Force on Police Accountability that Lightfoot co-chaired.

The civilian oversight board is likely to have the final say on police policy and be empowered to take a vote of no-confidence in the police superintendent that would trigger a similar City Council vote. The only question is whether Chicago voters will approve a binding referendum giving the oversight board even more power.

Adding to the mayor’s headaches are a tidal wave of police retirements and a firefighters pension bill that, Lightfoot claims, will saddle beleaguered Chicago taxpayers with $850 million in potential costs by 2055, setting the stage for a parade of future property tax increases.

Not to mention an emboldened Council that just handed the mayor her first defeat — on a 25-24 vote — on the issue that has divided Lightfoot and Council members since her inauguration: aldermanic prerogative.

ā€œIf the trend continues, there will be a period of the mayor being scapegoated for things that they’re no longer really responsible for or in charge of. It’s gonna be very difficult for anybody that is the mayor,ā€ given those changes, said Pat O’Connor, a former 40th Ward alderman.

ā€œIn Chicago, we’re used to the mayor being in charge. In a lot of cities throughout the country, the mayor really isn’t in charge. They cut ribbons. They put forth ideas. But they don’t really perform the job of control.ā€

O’Connor pointed to the changed dynamic in Springfield after the departure of two top Chicago Democrats who were among city’s strongest champions: longtime House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton.

Madigan was forced out by the Commonwealth Edison bribery scandal that triggered the indictment of two close political operatives. He has not been charged and has denied wrongdoing.

ā€œIn the past, you could count on Springfield to help the mayor of Chicago. In the past, you could look at people to be supportive of trying to make the streets safer and trying to be supportive of police. And now, all of that is turned on its head,ā€ O’Connor said.

ā€œSo a mayor coming in … is gonna have a difficult time getting their policies in place without a Council that’s willing to work with them and without a Springfield that’s willing to go the extra mile for the city, as it pretty much always did in the past.ā€

Democratic political consultant Peter Giangreco said it’s still early to know just how vulnerable Lightfoot really is and what impact the diminished role of the office — what one political insider called ā€œthe incredible shrinking mayorā€ — will have on possible mayoral challengers.

ā€œIf the mayor eventually … will have almost no say in the schools and you’ve got a potential position where they also can’t appoint the police [superintendent], the job becomes a glorified Streets and San commissioner job,ā€ said Giangreco, who advised Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza’s 2019 mayoral campaign.

ā€œEverything flows from public safety and education. If the mayor’s ability to affect those things continues to be restricted or taken away, it makes the job tougher to do and less appealing to run for.ā€

O’Connor, who spent many years as chairman of the Council’s Education Committee, argued the teachers union has been ā€œpretty much runningā€ CPS for a while, forcing the seven-member board appointed by the mayor to ā€œplay defense.ā€

That was evident when Lightfoot was forced to give away the store — at a cost of $1.5 billion over five years — to end the 11-day strike in 2019 by a union that had backed County Board President Toni Preckwinkle over Lightfoot in the mayoral election.

ā€œIt’s a tough way to run a system when, essentially, you’re trying to hold on as opposed to implement policy. But, at least you’re on the field when you’re playing defense. When you’re in the stands, it’s much harder to figure out how to impact the game,ā€ O’Connor said of the elected, 21-member board.

Lightfoot campaigned as a staunch proponent of an elected school board, only to repeatedly block what she called an ā€œunwieldyā€ bill tripling the size of the board to 21 members, with a president elected citywide.

ā€œDuring the campaign, that was a very strong part of her pitch. To say, ā€˜Now that I’m here, I see more clearly and this is a bad idea,’ the horse was way out of the barn,ā€ O’Connor said.

ā€œBut again, the relationship that previously existed between the mayor’s office and the state legislature and the governor would pretty much have prevented those things from happening. And that relationship seems to be non-existent at this point.ā€

Lightfoot also campaigned on a promise to give a civilian oversight board the power to fire the police superintendent and also have the final say over police policy.

She hasn’t deliver on that promise, either — and blocked pending ordinances that would do what she said she would do. When she finally delivered her own version of civilian oversight, it reserved those decision-making powers to the mayor.

ā€œPeople felt double-crossed. Because of what the City Council and the Legislature thought of her, they’re sticking it to her,ā€ the political observer said.

ā€œNow, Chicago will have to live with the consequences of a weakened mayor. They have taken an important position and stripped it of its capacity to effect change.ā€

The mayor’s frayed relationship with the Council has been evident since her inauguration. But it came into sharp relief during the angry confrontation between Lightfoot and Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) last week.

Lightfoot could not contain her anger after Taylor joined Ald. Ray Lopez (15th) in a parliamentary maneuver to delay Lightfoot’s appointment of Celia Meza as corporation counsel. They did it to protest the Law Department’s treatment of Anjanette Young, the woman whose home was raided by Chicago police officers who had the wrong address.

Taylor has since likened Lightfoot to a ā€œbullyā€ and said she wouldn’t speak to her until she apologizes.

ā€œWho stands up to her? This is not the first time she did this to somebody. She does this all the time, and people let her get away with it,ā€ Taylor has told the Sun-Times.

ā€œIt’s a ā€˜no.’ How many times do you keep letting a bully bully you? Clearly, this is bullying.ā€

Since that confrontation and the 25-24 vote to strip away from Lightfoot’s pandemic relief package that portion of the mayor’s ordinance that eliminates aldermanic control over sign permits, aldermen clearly smell political blood in the water.

In a letter to the mayor, 22 aldermen demanded that she ā€œhonor and consistently followā€ Council rules of procedure, citing numerous occasions when Lightfoot made parliamentary rulings contradicting those rules.

Demands for the Council to hire its own legal counsel and its own parliamentarian are also gaining steam.

All that spells potential trouble when it comes to determining how $1.9 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds will be spent. That will be wrapped into Lightfoot’s unveiling of the 2022 city budget, which the mayor has moved to September — a month early.

In Round One of the 2019 mayoral election, Lightfoot finished first in a crowded field of 14 enticed by Emanuel’s decision to call it quits.

Lightfoot had languished in the single digits until Jan. 3, 2019, when the first round of federal charges were filed against Ald. Edward Burke (14th).

Preckwinkle’s mayoral campaign acknowledged that day she had received a $10,000 campaign contribution Burke allegedly muscled from a Burger King franchise owner. The Preckwinkle campaign said she knew nothing about the alleged shakedown and returned the contribution because it exceeded legal limits.

Preckwinkle tried desperately to distance herself from Burke — returning the money she raised at his house and using her position as Cook County Democratic Party chairwoman to strip Burke of his role as head of judicial slate-making.

It didn’t work. In Round 2, Lightfoot swept all 50 wards.

This time around, the mayoral field is almost certain to be smaller — at least in part due to those soon-to-be-diminished mayoral powers.

Among the possible challengers are: former Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan; Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6th); Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd); City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin; U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.); CTU Vice President Stacy Davis Gates; and City Clerk Anna Valencia, now running for Illinois secretary of state.

ā€œMayor Lightfoot has been given the benefit of the doubt for a while because of COVID. As the city recovers, there’s gonna be a re-focusing on her ability to get public safety under control. To do the two things that people want: Keep them safe in their homes and reform the police so these shootings of particularly Black and Brown young people come to an end,ā€ Giangreco said.

ā€œIt’s tough to pull off. This is not just a Chicago problem. … We’ll see it play out in mayor’s races all over the country. That trying to enact racial justice reforms in the face of a nationwide spike in homicides is really, really tough. It gets tougher if the structure of government ties the mayor’s hands.ā€

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Lightfoot’s troubles put her under harsh spotlight — as office she holds becomes shadow of what it wason June 30, 2021 at 10:40 pm Read More Ā»

Bill Cosby freed from prison after sex conviction overturnedon June 30, 2021 at 9:40 pm

PHILADELPHIA — Pennsylvania’s highest court threw out Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction and released him from prison Wednesday in a stunning reversal of fortune for the comedian once known as ā€œAmerica’s Dad,ā€ ruling that the prosecutor who brought the case was bound by his predecessor’s agreement not to charge Cosby.

Cosby, 83, flashed the V-for-victory sign to a helicopter overhead as he trudged into his suburban Philadelphia home after serving nearly three years of a three- to 10-year sentence for drugging and violating Temple University sports administrator Andrea Constand in 2004.

The former ā€œCosby Showā€ star — the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era — had no comment as he arrived, and just smiled and nodded later at a news conference outside, where his lawyer Jennifer Bonjean said: ā€œWe are thrilled to have Mr. Cosby home.ā€

ā€œHe served three years of an unjust sentence and he did it with dignity and principle,ā€ she added.

Comedian Bill Cosby, left, and spokesperson Andrew Wyatt approach members of the media gathered outside the home of the entertainer in Elkins Park, Pa., Wednesday, June 30, 2021. Pennsylvania's highest court has overturned Cosby's sex assault conviction.
Comedian Bill Cosby, left, and spokesperson Andrew Wyatt approach members of the media gathered outside the home of the entertainer in Elkins Park, Pa., Wednesday, June 30, 2021. Pennsylvania’s highest court has overturned Cosby’s sex assault conviction.
AP

Cosby was arrested in 2015, when a district attorney armed with newly unsealed evidence — the comic’s damaging deposition in a lawsuit brought by Constand — filed charges against him just days before the 12-year statute of limitations was about to run out.

But the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said Wednesday that District Attorney Kevin Steele, who made the decision to arrest Cosby, was obligated to stand by his predecessor’s promise not to charge Cosby, though there was no evidence that agreement was ever put in writing.

Justice David Wecht, writing for a split court, said Cosby had relied on the previous district attorney’s decision not to charge him when the comedian gave his potentially incriminating testimony in Constand’s civil case.

The court called Cosby’s subsequent arrest ā€œan affront to fundamental fairness, particularly when it results in a criminal prosecution that was forgone for more than a decade.ā€ It said justice and ā€œfair play and decencyā€ require that the district attorney’s office stand by the decision of the previous DA.

The justices said that overturning the conviction and barring any further prosecution ā€œis the only remedy that comports with society’s reasonable expectations of its elected prosecutors and our criminal justice system.ā€

Cosby was promptly set free from the state prison in suburban Montgomery County and driven home.

ā€œWhat we saw today was justice, justice for all Americans,ā€ said another Cosby attorney, Andrew Wyatt. ā€œMr. Cosby’s conviction being overturned is for the world and all Americans who are being treated unfairly by the judicial system and some bad officers.ā€

Bonjean said Cosby was ā€œextremely happy to be homeā€ and ā€œlooks forward to reuniting with his wife and children.ā€ Several supporters outside yelled, ā€œHey, hey, hey!ā€ — the catchphrase of Cosby’s animated Fat Albert character — which brought a smile from him.

In a statement, Steele said Cosby went free ā€œon a procedural issue that is irrelevant to the facts of the crime.ā€ He commended Constand for coming forward and added: ā€œMy hope is that this decision will not dampen the reporting of sexual assaults by victims.ā€

Constand and her lawyer did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

ā€œFINALLY!!!! A terrible wrong is being righted — a miscarriage of justice is corrected!ā€ the actor’s ā€œCosby Showā€ co-star Phylicia Rashad tweeted.

ā€œI am furious to hear this news,ā€ actor Amber Tamblyn, a founder of Time’s Up, an advocacy group for victims of sexual assault, said on Twitter. ā€œI personally know women who this man drugged and raped while unconscious. Shame on the court and this decision.ā€

Four Supreme Court justices formed the majority that ruled in Cosby’s favor, while three others dissented in whole or in part.

Peter Goldberger, a suburban Philadelphia lawyer with an expertise in criminal appeals, said prosecutors could ask the Pennsylvania Supreme Court for reargument or reconsideration, but it would be a very long shot.

ā€œI can’t imagine that with such a lengthy opinion, with a thoughtful concurring opinion and a thoughtful dissenting opinion, that you could honestly say they made a simple mistake that would change their minds if they point it out to them,ā€ Goldberger said.

Even though Cosby was charged only with the assault on Constand, the judge at his trial allowed five other accusers to testify that they, too, were similarly victimized by Cosby in the 1980s. Prosecutors called them as witnesses to establish what they said was a pattern of behavior on Cosby’s part.

Cosby’s lawyers had argued on appeal that the use of the five additional accusers was improper. But the Pennsylvania high court did not weigh in on the question, saying it was moot, given the finding that Cosby should not have been prosecuted in the first place.

In New York, the judge at last year’s trial of Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, whose case helped sparked the #MeToo movement in 2017, let four other accusers testify. Weinstein was convicted and sentenced to 23 years in prison.

In sentencing Cosby, the trial judge had ruled him a sexually violent predator who could not be safely allowed out in public and needed to report to authorities for the rest of his life.

In May, Cosby was denied parole after refusing to participate in sex offender programs behind bars. He said he would resist the treatment programs and refuse to acknowledge wrongdoing even if it meant serving the full 10 years.

The groundbreaking Black actor grew up in public housing in Philadelphia and made a fortune estimated at $400 million during his 50 years in the entertainment industry that included the TV shows ā€œI Spy,ā€ ā€œThe Cosby Showā€ and ā€œFat Albert,ā€ along with comedy albums and a multitude of television commercials.

The suburban Philadelphia prosecutor who originally looked into Constand’s allegations, Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor, considered the case flawed because Constand waited a year to come forward and stayed in contact with Cosby afterward. Castor declined to prosecute and instead encouraged Constand to sue for damages.

Questioned under oath as part of that lawsuit, Cosby said he used to offer quaaludes to women he wanted to have sex with. He eventually settled with Constand for $3.4 million.

Portions of the deposition later became public at the request of The Associated Press and spelled Cosby’s downfall, opening the floodgates on accusations from other women and destroying the comic’s good-guy reputation and career. More than 60 women came forward to say Cosby violated them.

The AP does not typically identify sexual assault victims without their permission, which Constand has granted.

Cosby, in the deposition, acknowledged giving quaaludes to a 19-year-old woman before having sex with her at a Las Vegas hotel in 1976. Cosby called the encounter consensual.

On Wednesday, the woman, Therese Serignese, now 64, said the court ruling ā€œtakes my breath away.ā€

ā€œI just think it’s a miscarriage of justice. This is about procedure. It’s not about the truth of the women,ā€ she said. Serignese said she took solace in the fact Cosby served nearly three years behind bars: ā€œThat’s as good as it gets in Americaā€ for sex crime victims.

Follow Maryclaire Dale on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Maryclairedale

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Afternoon Edition: June 30, 2021on June 30, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be mostly cloudy with a high near 83 degrees and a 40% chance of thunderstorms. You can expect similar conditions to continue tonight with a low around 67. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high near 76.

Top story

19 aldermen call special City Council meeting for Friday on violent crime

Nineteen aldermen are calling a special virtual Chicago City Council meeting for 11 a.m. Friday — and threatening to take a vote of no-confidence in Chicago Police Supt. David Brown if he doesn’t show up to testify — about police response to gun violence in the city.

A quorum of 26 aldermen is needed to convene and meet as a committee of the whole to take testimony from Brown or take the vote of no-confidence if he fails to appear. That means that seven aldermen who did not sign the call for a special meeting would have to show up anyway.

Whether or not that will happen is anybody’s guess. Six aldermen have already peeled off in the last 24 hours under pressure from the mayor’s office.

ā€œAll we can do is hope for the best. … We’ve got 19 that signed on. There may be a few that show up. And of course, there may be a few that don’t,ā€ said Ald. Anthony Beale (9th), one of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s most outspoken City Council critics.

Ald. Ray Lopez (15th) said aldermen had to call the special meeting after their efforts to try to ā€œwork with the administration to have a Public Safety Committee meeting failed.ā€

Lopez flatly predicted a quorum, though six aldermen have peeled off. He noted ā€œa numberā€ of aldermen who didn’t sign the letter ā€œdid express support for the meeting and intend to be there.ā€

Lopez said he hopes Brown shows up to answer questions and that it doesn’t come to a no-confidence vote that would mirror what the Fraternal Order of Police already has done.

Chicago Police Department spokesman Tom Ahern wouldn’t say if Brown would attend the special meeting. Brown has planned a news conference for tomorrow, presumably to unveil his plan to prevent a third straight weekend of mass shootings over the coming holiday weekend.

Fran Spielman has more on the special meeting here.

More news you need

  1. The most infectious variant of the coronavirus yet is expected to dominate Chicago and the rest of Illinois within months. Mitchell Armentrout spoke with local experts about the Delta variant and what makes it so dangerous.
  2. Federal prosecutors are considering the death penalty for two men they say shot and killed a security guard before robbing a bank in Gary on June 11. They robbed nearly $10,000 to pay off the bills of an amateur football team, prosecutors said.
  3. Families at or below the federal poverty line can now pay $1 for child care as part of a move to expand access to services for Illinoisans as the state recovers from the pandemic. The permanent policy change could reduce monthly child care costs for 80% of the state’s families, Gov. Pritzker said yesterday.
  4. Illinois GOP Reps. Rodney Davis and Adam Kinzinger joined with Democrats yesterday to approve a measure to remove statues of Confederate leaders from the U.S. Capitol. Both Kinzinger and Davis have been mentioned as potential candidates for governor in 2022.
  5. A Gold Coast man has been charged with murder after police in Dwight noticed the body of his 81-year-old mother in the passenger seat of his car. The cause of death was strangulation, according to the Grundy County coroner.

A bright one

In the past five years, Pastor Donovan Price has been evicted from six homes and lost four cars as a consequence of dedicating his life to being what’s called a ā€œstreet pastor.ā€

Being a street pastor isn’t lucrative. But that path has led Price to over 1,000 homicide scenes and countless other shootings since he founded his organization, Solutions and Resources, in 2016.

Last Thursday, the philanthropic group Chicago Beyond announced Price’s organization will receive $1 million over several years to continue his work. He is among a number of groups receiving a large investment to help foster ā€œholistic healingā€ in Black and Brown communities.

Pastor Donovan Price outside of New Progressive Missionary Baptist Church.
Pastor Donovan Price outside of New Progressive Missionary Baptist Church.
Brian Rich/Sun-Times

Chicago Beyond’s ā€œHolistic Healing Fundā€ will ultimately provide $10 million to community leaders and organizations that prioritize healing in their work. The fund will support groups working to reverse the harm of systemic racism, disinvestment, gun violence and trauma.

Liz Dozier, founder and CEO of Chicago Beyond, said the Healing Fund is for people like Price who haven’t received much financial support in the past.

Another recipient, the Resident Association of Greater Englewood (R.A.G.E.), focuses on making the community more self-sufficient. It will receive $500,000 from Chicago Beyond for a fund that’s led by residents and will invest in their ideas. Half of that money will also go to further building out the organization.

Manny Ramos has more on the major investments here.

From the press box

After dealing with several days of controversy, Blackhawks fans finally got some good news: Jonathan Toews intends to play next season. The Hawks captain revealed today that he missed the 2020-21 season while dealing with Chronic Immune Response Syndrome.

Columnist Rick Morrisey writes: ā€œIt was great to see Toews on that video Wednesday, sounding like Toews, skating like Toews, being serious like Toews. For 13 seasons, the Hawks — and us — were blessed with his presence, and when that presence went away, it was a massive physical and emotional void. How are you supposed to skate with one leg? That’s how it felt.ā€

With the Cubs at the halfway point of the season, columnist Steve Greenberg says panicking is the logical next step, but recent history says fans should relax and look for a rebound.

Candace Parker, Courtney Vandersloot and first-time All-Star Kahleah Copper will represent the Sky on the Team WNBA roster at this year’s All-Star game. The 12-player team will take on the USA Basketball Women’s National Team in Las Vegas on July 14.

Your daily question ?

What would you like the city to do for your neighborhood? Tell us why. Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday, we asked you: With the highly contagious Delta variant of COVID-19 reportedly spreading in Illinois, do you plan to take more precautions again? Here’s what some of you said…

ā€œI have completed both vaccines. The reason why I will remain cautious is because I have to think about the little people that aren’t able to get the vaccine, and the others that didn’t take it for whatever reason. I’m asking God to watch over us all during this troubling time.ā€ — Dolores MzDee Wilson

ā€œNo. I’m a COVID survivor and still have the antibodies. The scientific data from CDC, WHO, and reputable organizations support that my risk of reinfection is very low, even for the variants, and I don’t need to mask.ā€ — Rebecca Templeton

ā€œI’m torn. I’m so enjoying not wearing my mask, but I think when I’m in larger venues with larger crowds, I’ll be wearing it again (airport, concert, outdoor markets). The variant feels scary even though I’m fully vaccinated.ā€ — Nina Kavin

ā€œNo. I got vaccinated quite a while ago. If you’re eligible to get a vaccine and you haven’t and you get sick — well that’s too bad. But, we’re closer to reaching herd immunity.ā€ — Stephen Mueller

ā€œI’m a respiratory therapist, so I can’t even pretend that the pandemic is over since I see these sick patients daily! I never stopped wearing a mask, staying away from large crowds, or doing hand hygiene, so I will continue what I’ve been doing.ā€ — LeNnierre Watkins

ā€œI’m still masking up, taking precautions and staying in to reduce transmission. I’m immunocompromised and would end up in the hospital from regular colds and cases of the flu. I had already been wearing masks way before the pandemic. I also have an immunocompromised child that has additional risk factors so I NEED to keep him safe. So many lives could be saved if we kept our germs to ourselves but most people would rather see others DIE than slightly inconvenience themselves. It is truly saddening to me.ā€ — Melissa Cintron

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Afternoon Edition: June 30, 2021on June 30, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More Ā»

Bill Cosby freed from prison after sex conviction overturnedon June 30, 2021 at 8:11 pm

PHILADELPHIA — Pennsylvania’s highest court threw out Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction and released him from prison Wednesday in a stunning reversal of fortune for the comedian once known as ā€œAmerica’s Dad,ā€ ruling that the prosecutor who brought the case was bound by his predecessor’s agreement not to charge Cosby.

Cosby, 83, flashed the V-for-victory sign to a helicopter overhead as he trudged into his suburban Philadelphia home after serving nearly three years of a three- to 10-year sentence for drugging and violating Temple University sports administrator Andrea Constand in 2004.

The former ā€œCosby Showā€ star — the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era — had no immediate comment.

Cosby was arrested in 2015, when a district attorney armed with newly unsealed evidence — the comic’s damaging deposition in a lawsuit filed by Constand — brought charges against him just days before the 12-year statute of limitations was about to run out.

But the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said Wednesday that District Attorney Kevin Steele, who made the decision to arrest Cosby, was obligated to stand by his predecessor’s promise not to charge Cosby, though there was no evidence that promise was ever put in writing.

Justice David Wecht, writing for a split court, said Cosby had relied on the previous district attorney’s decision not to charge him when the comedian gave his potentially incriminating testimony in Constand’s civil case.

The court called Cosby’s subsequent arrest ā€œan affront to fundamental fairness, particularly when it results in a criminal prosecution that was forgone for more than a decade.ā€ It said justice and ā€œfair play and decencyā€ require that the district attorney’s office stand by the decision of the previous DA.

The justices said that overturning the conviction, and barring any further prosecution, ā€œis the only remedy that comports with society’s reasonable expectations of its elected prosecutors and our criminal justice system.ā€

As Cosby was promptly set free from the state prison in suburban Montgomery County and driven home, his appeals lawyer, Jennifer Bonjean, said he should never have been prosecuted.

ā€œDistrict attorneys can’t change it up simply because of their political motivation,ā€ she said, adding that Cosby remains in excellent health, apart from being legally blind.

In a statement, Steele said Cosby went free ā€œon a procedural issue that is irrelevant to the facts of the crime.ā€ He commended Constand for coming forward and added: ā€œMy hope is that this decision will not dampen the reporting of sexual assaults by victims. … We still believe that no one is above the law — including those who are rich, famous and powerful.ā€

Constand and her lawyer did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

ā€œFINALLY!!!! A terrible wrong is being righted — a miscarriage of justice is corrected!ā€ the actor’s ā€œCosby Showā€ co-star Phylicia Rashad tweeted.

ā€œI am furious to hear this news,ā€ actor Amber Tamblyn, a founder of Time’s Up, an advocacy group for victims of sexual assault, said in a Twitter post. ā€œI personally know women who this man drugged and raped while unconscious. Shame on the court and this decision.ā€

In sentencing Cosby, the trial judge had ruled him a sexually violent predator who could not be safely allowed out in public and needed to report to authorities for the rest of his life.

Four Supreme Court justices formed the majority that ruled in Cosby’s favor, while three others dissented in whole or in part.

Peter Goldberger, a suburban Philadelphia lawyer with an expertise in criminal appeals, said prosecutors could ask the Pennsylvania Supreme Court for reargument or reconsideration, but it would be a very long shot.

ā€œI can’t imagine that with such a lengthy opinion, with a thoughtful concurring opinion and a thoughtful dissenting opinion, that you could honestly say they made a simple mistake that would change their minds if they point it out to them,ā€ Goldberger said.

Even though Cosby was charged only with the assault on Constand, the judge at his trial allowed five other accusers to testify that they, too, were similarly victimized by Cosby in the 1980s. Prosecutors called them as witnesses to establish what they said was a pattern of behavior on Cosby’s part.

Cosby’s lawyers had argued on appeal that the use of the five additional accusers was improper.

But the Pennsylvania high court did not weigh in on the question, saying it was moot given the justices’ finding that Cosby should not have been prosecuted in the first place.

In New York, the judge at last year’s trial of Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, whose case helped sparked the #MeToo movement in 2017, let four other accusers testify. Weinstein was convicted and sentenced to 23 years in prison.

In May, Cosby was denied parole after refusing to participate in sex offender programs behind bars. He said he would resist the treatment programs and refuse to acknowledge wrongdoing even if it meant serving the full 10 years.

Prosecutors said Cosby repeatedly used his fame and family man persona to manipulate young women, holding himself out as a mentor before betraying them.

The groundbreaking Black actor grew up in public housing in Philadelphia and made a fortune estimated at $400 million during his 50 years in the entertainment industry that included the TV shows ā€œI Spy,ā€ ā€œThe Cosby Showā€ and ā€œFat Albert,ā€ along with comedy albums and a multitude of television commercials.

The suburban Philadelphia prosecutor who originally looked into Constand’s allegations, Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor, considered the case flawed because Constand waited a year to come forward and stayed in contact with Cosby afterward. Castor declined to prosecute and instead encouraged Constand to sue for damages.

Questioned under oath as part of that lawsuit, Cosby said he used to offer quaaludes to women he wanted to have sex with. He eventually settled with Constand for $3.4 million.

Portions of the deposition later became public at the request of The Associated Press and spelled Cosby’s downfall, opening the floodgates on accusations from other women and destroying the comic’s good-guy reputation and career. More than 60 women came forward to say Cosby violated them.

The AP does not typically identify sexual assault victims without their permission, which Constand has granted.

Cosby, in the deposition, acknowledged giving quaaludes to a 19-year-old woman before having sex with her at a Las Vegas hotel in 1976. Cosby called the encounter consensual.

On Wednesday, the woman, Therese Serignese, now 64, said the court ruling ā€œtakes my breath away.ā€

ā€œI just think it’s a miscarriage of justice. This is about procedure. It’s not about the truth of the women,ā€ she said. She said she took solace in the fact Cosby served nearly three years: ā€œThat’s as good as it gets in Americaā€ for sex crime victims, she said.

___

Follow Maryclaire Dale on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Maryclairedale

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Bill Cosby freed from prison after sex conviction overturnedon June 30, 2021 at 8:11 pm Read More Ā»

MLB suspends former Cubs, Mets executive Jared Porter through 2022 seasonon June 30, 2021 at 8:12 pm

NEW YORK — Fired New York Mets general manager Jared Porter was suspended by Major League Baseball through at least the end of the 2022 regular season following an investigation that began after a report that he sent sexually explicit text messages and images to a female reporter in 2016 while he was working for the Cubs.

Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred announced the discipline Wednesday without saying specifically what the investigation had found.

ā€œMy office has completed its investigation into alleged inappropriate conduct by Jared Porter,ā€ Manfred said in a statement. ā€œHaving reviewed all of the available evidence, I have concluded that Mr. Porter violated MLB’s policies, and that placement on the ineligible list is warranted.ā€

Porter is eligible to apply for reinstatement after the final game of the 2022 regular season, a timetable that could allow him to apply for front-office openings that October.

Porter was fired by the Mets on Jan. 19, about nine hours after ESPN reported that he sent dozens of unanswered texts to the woman, including a picture of ā€œan erect, naked penis.ā€ ESPN said it obtained a copy of the text history, and some of the messages and photos Porter sent were displayed in the report online.

Porter was fired by the team for cause, and MLB started its investigation.

ā€œWe are committed to providing an appropriate work environment consistent with our values for all those involved in our game,ā€ Manfred said.

Porter did not immediately reply to a text message from The Associated Press seeking comment.

The 41-year-old was hired by the Mets on Dec. 13 and given a four-year contract. He spent the previous four seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks as senior vice president and assistant general manager under GM Mike Hazen.

Porter was hired by the Boston Red Sox as an intern in 2004 and was promoted to player development assistant from 2006-07, coordinator of professional scouting from 2008-09, assistant director of professional scouting from 2010-11 and director of professional scouting from 2012-15.

He followed Theo Epstein to Chicago and spent 2016 as the Cubs’ director of professional scouting, helping the team to its first World Series title since 1908.

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MLB suspends former Cubs, Mets executive Jared Porter through 2022 seasonon June 30, 2021 at 8:12 pm Read More Ā»

Despite COVID’s spread in prisons, there’s little to suggest prisons will do better next timeon June 30, 2021 at 8:48 pm

Derrick Johnson had a makeshift mask.

He had the spray bottle of bleach and extra soap that corrections officers provided.

But he still spent every day crammed in a unit with 63 other men in a Florida prison, crowding into hallways on their way to meals and sleeping only feet away from one another at night.

As the coronavirus ravaged the Everglades Correctional Institution, Johnson was surrounded by coughing and requests for Tylenol.

ā€œPrison is not built to compete with a pandemic,ā€ said Johnson, who was released in December.

The pandemic forced prisons to adapt. Bu now, as new cases are declining and restrictions are being loosened, there’s little evidence to suggest that enough substantive changes have been made to handle future waves of infection, an investigation by The Marshall Project and The Associated Press has found.

The two news organizations — which tracked the spread of COVID-19 through prisons nationwide, counting more than a half million people living and working in prisons who got sick from the coronavirus — found that, with crowded conditions, substandard medical care and constantly shifting populations, prisons were ill-equipped to handle the highly contagious virus. Nationwide, it killed nearly 3,000 prisoners and staff.

Corrections systems responded with inconsistent policies, struggling to contain the virus. At the peak of the pandemic peak in mid-December, more than 25,000 prisoners tested positive in a single week.

In recent months, infections behind bars nationwide have slowed to a few hundred new cases each week, and many prisons have eased restrictions for mask-wearing, visitors and other movement in and out, going back to business as usual.

But it’s still a critical moment, with new coronavirus cases low but the threat of infection looming as new variants spread, said Dr. David Sears, an infectious-disease specialist and correctional health consultant.

ā€œThe medical community, prison leadership and society at large have learned so much about COVID in a short period of time,ā€ Sears said. ā€œWe need to take these lessons and make sure that the things we’ve learned after a lot of real human suffering are not in vain.ā€

According to the data collected by The Marshall Project and Associated Press, about three in 10 people in state and federal prisons were infected with the virus. But correctional health experts widely agree that’s an undercount.

Kelly Markham, a registered nurse supervisor at Minnesota's Faribault Prison, administers the state's first COVID-19 vaccination to a medically vulnerable inmate, Edward Anderson, in January.
Kelly Markham, a registered nurse supervisor at Minnesota’s Faribault Prison, administers the state’s first COVID-19 vaccination to a medically vulnerable inmate, Edward Anderson, in January.
Aaron Lavinsky / Star Tribune via AP

ā€œA great many of the people who ever had COVID, they were never tested,ā€ said Dr. Homer Venters, a former chief medical officer of the New York City jail system who inspected health conditions in prisons around the country over the past year. ā€œIn most prisons, it ran through these places like wildfire.ā€

One man housed at a low-security federal prison compared the Bureau of Prisons’ public data to what he was seeing inside. At least half of his unit fell ill, he said, but the bureau’s data didn’t reflect that.

ā€œFor the first year of the COVID, they never tested anybody in my institution unless they had a fever,ā€ the man said in a call from prison. ā€œThe easiest way to not have a positive at your institution is to not test anybody.ā€

In the pandemic’s early days, testing within the Bureau of Prisons was limited, and staff members at some prisons were told there was no need to test inmates; they should just assume everyone had the coronavirus. The Justice Department’s inspector general found that, at some facilities, inmates who tested positive were left in their housing units for days without being isolated.

The Bureau of Prisons said it follows guidance from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and that inmates who are symptomatic or test positive are placed in medical isolation until they recover.

Even when state and federal prisons conducted tests, they still allowed prisoners who tested positive to come in contact with others.

Texas prison officials transferred more than 100 infected prisoners in East Texas to prisons outside Houston in the first months of the pandemic. Officials said the move would bring the men closer to medical resources. A few days after a group of the sick arrived to his unit, Jason Duncan fell ill.

ā€œThe unit nurse came around to take temperatures, mine was checked at 102,ā€ he wrote in a letter at the time. A few hours after having his temperature taken, he fainted. ā€œWhen I came to, my body was so hot I could not stand at all. I could not breathe, it felt like the life was being [sucked] out of me.ā€

Eventually, he ended up in a hospital ā€œhooked up to a breathing machine.ā€ Finally, he got a COVID-19 test. ā€œI was given no medication at all,ā€ he wrote, saying he was sent back to the prison, housed in the wing with the sick prisoners who’d been transferred in.

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Despite COVID’s spread in prisons, there’s little to suggest prisons will do better next timeon June 30, 2021 at 8:48 pm Read More Ā»

Jose Lobaton lands on the 60-day IL with right shoulder sprainon June 30, 2021 at 7:07 pm

MILWAUKEE — Another day, another injury to a Cubs backup catcher.

This time, it’s catcher Jose Lobaton who has landed on the 60-day injured list with a right shoulder sprain. Lobaton injured the shoulder on the last play of Tuesday’s 2-1 loss as he tried to avoid colliding with Brewers closer Josh Hader and fell on the shoulder as he stumbled.

The Cubs selected catcher Taylor Gushue from Triple-A Iowa to take Lobaton’s place on the roster. The 27-year-old catcher will be appearing in the big leagues for the first time and was slashing .272/.328/.440 with five homers this season.

Gushue becomes the fifth backup catcher the Cubs have used this season with Austin Romine (left wrist sprain), Tony Wolters, P.J. Higgins (right flexor strain/partially torn UCL) and Lobaton.

ā€œYou see a guy go down like that and then get out there and see the facial expressions and emotions, it’s just tough,ā€ manager David Ross said. ā€œIt is like a pretty, pretty severe sprain. He was in some real pain. Hopefully, it’s a speedy recovery for him and gets back to help us out later.

ā€œMe and Willson were walking off the field with [Lobaton] hurt shaking our heads and kind of like, another backup catcher [injury]. Just a position that we’re short in. Injuries, adversity, these are things that come up during the season that you have to try to overcome. It stinks for the guys to get hurt.ā€

Hoerner could return this weekend

While the Cubs have not had the best luck with injuries recently, they may be close to getting second baseman Nico Hoerner back. Hoerner has been on a rehab assignment with Triple-A Iowa and gone 2-for-5 during his stint.

Ross didn’t shoot down the notion that Hoerner could be back with the Cubs this weekend in Cincinnati.

ā€œI think it’s a possibility,ā€ Ross said. ā€œWe’ll see. All good signs, but the more and more guys go down, the more it’s a possibility.ā€

Davis, Rodriguez selected for Futures Game

Cubs top prospect Brennen Davis was selected to play in this year’s Futures Game at the MLB All-Star game. Davis, who was recently promoted to Double-A, is the Cubs highest-ranked position player prospect and the No. 45 prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. He’s slashing .255/.368/.396 with three home runs this season.

Right-hander Manny Rodriguez was also selected to play in the game. The fireballing right-hander was promoted to Triple-A Iowa on Sunday and has a 2.03 ERA in 13 games this season.

ā€œIt’s just super positive,ā€ Ross said. ā€œManny’s been through a lot in particular, some ups and downs. The injuries. Just got promoted. He’s starting to throw the ball well and just got promoted. Really good for him.

ā€œBrennen is having a great season. First time I got to really see him play in person in spring training. The athleticism, the ability to go get the ball and run the bases. The physique continues to develop at such a young age. I think it’s just super positive to be around that environment of the Futures game.ā€

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Jose Lobaton lands on the 60-day IL with right shoulder sprainon June 30, 2021 at 7:07 pm Read More Ā»

Teacher who was fired for denying herā€white privilegeā€ gets the green light for her defamation lawsuit.on June 30, 2021 at 7:28 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

Teacher who was fired for denying herā€white privilegeā€ gets the green light for her defamation lawsuit.

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Teacher who was fired for denying herā€white privilegeā€ gets the green light for her defamation lawsuit.on June 30, 2021 at 7:28 pm Read More Ā»