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Man dies in crash, car fire in Back of the Yardson June 28, 2021 at 11:18 pm

A 47-year-old man died after he crashed into a median and his vehicle caught on fire Sunday morning in Back of the Yards on the South Side.

Just before 11 a.m., the man was driving a Suburu at a high rate of speed in the 5200 block of South Ashland Avenue when he lost control of the vehicle and crashed into a median and a tree, Chicago police said.

The Suburu ended up in the northbound lanes and struck a Chevy Silverado, police said.

Officers then responded to a call of the Suburu on fire, according to police.

The 47-year-old driver was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was later pronounced dead. The Cook County medical examiner’s office has not yet identified the man.

The 31-year-old driver of the Chevy refused medical attention at the scene.

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Family members remember life of young nursing student and new mother killed in Bronzeville shootingon June 28, 2021 at 11:37 pm

Family members gathered outside Chicago police headquarters over the weekend to remember Crystal Crockett — a nursing student and loving new mother to twin girls who was fatally shot earlier this month in Bronzeville.

Crockett, 21, moved to the city from Downers Grove just a few years ago to look after her grandmother and begin attending nursing school at Malcolm X College.

“She loved taking care of people,” said her sister Nivea Crockett. “She just loved her job.”

She began dating Elijah Clippard, 31, about a year ago and became pregnant with twin girls who were born in March, about 24 weeks before their due date, family members said.

Crockett was thrilled to be a parent and was a natural “super mom,” her sister said. Every day she visited the babies at the Rush University Medical Center NICU, where the babies will remain until they are able to breathe and eat on their own, family members said.

“They are tiny but they are mighty,” her sister said.

The evening of June 14, Clippard and Crockett were seen on surveillance video at the hospital visiting their child, Cook County prosecutors said.

At 6:15 a.m. the next day, Clippard is seen on surveillance video driving a car with Crockett in the passenger seat, prosecutors said. He parked the car in an empty lot behind an apartment complex and got out while holding a firearm in his right hand, appearing “seemingly agitated,” prosecutors said.

He looked around “as if to make sure no one is there” and allegedly fired at Crockett multiple times.

“My daughter did not deserve this,” Crockett’s mother Kylia Robinson said.

“Crystal wouldn’t hurt a fly,” her sister added.

Crockett told her family that she was afraid of Clippard, and her sister advised her to leave him.

“She could never tell him no, anytime she would tell him no, it would be a problem for her,” Nivea Crockett said. “She told him no I guess that day.”

Crockett’s older brother Creston Robinson said he now wishes his sister had stayed in the suburbs.

“Crystal did not deserve this, Crystal was a beautiful person, ” her brother said. “Crystal was very introverted, she was very respectful. She did what she had to do for her babies, she was an outstanding citizen.”

Police arrested Clippard Wednesday in the Eden Green housing development on the Far South Side, where he lived. Clippard was ordered held without bail Thursday and is expected back in court July 14.

The young babies will now have to grow up without either parent, advocate Andrew Holmes said Sunday.

“He (the shooter) not only took the mother’s life, but you also took the life away from her two precious kids,” Holmes said.

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Family members remember life of young nursing student and new mother killed in Bronzeville shootingon June 28, 2021 at 11:37 pm Read More »

Plans for outdoor roller rink in West Garfield Park get mixed reaction in communityon June 28, 2021 at 10:30 pm

Hair salons, clothing stores and restaurants line Madison Street in West Garfield Park, the community’s main commercial corridor. But between those businesses are scattered empty lots, where grass and weeds grow through gravel and cracked concrete.

One of those empty lots will soon be a new outdoor roller rink and community plaza.

Some in the community are excited about the project. But it’s the area’s other trade that has some concerned. The Garfield Park Chamber of Commerce and Cook County Black Chamber started petitions, trying unsuccessfully to block the city’s plans for what the groups called “a drug infested, crime ridden area.”

The Madison Street-Pulaski Road intersection is an open-air drug market, where drug deals go down in broad daylight, residents and officials say. And last Tuesday, about three blocks from the site of the project, the community saw five people hurt in the city’s second mass shooting of the day.

Earlier this month, the mayor’s office said West Garfield Park is within the top five communities experiencing narcotics sales and opioid addiction and ranks seventh out of the top 15 neighborhoods experiencing gun violence.

The community plaza and roller rink are intended to offer some relief.

“Bringing positive traffic to the area cannot hurt in any way,” said Ald. Jason Ervin (28th). “What it also would do is put the onus on the community and also Chicago Police Department to provide a safer environment for people that wish to come participate in activities at the park facility.”

The lot has been vacant since 2002, according to the Chicago Park District. The idea for a roller rink grew out of conversations with residents, who expressed “a shared desire for spaces for intergenerational activities.”

Residents also said a rink would be particularly significant, given that roller skating has a history in the Black community. During the Civil Rights movement, roller rinks were areas of desegregation protests. Many rinks also served as a starting place for Black musicians.

Jackie Winston, 58, said when she was growing up in the neighborhood, children had bowling alleys, movie theaters and roller rinks to spend their time at. She said bringing back positive activity spaces is key to making the community safer.

“We don’t have any recreational things for kids after school. We need positive things,” said Winston.

Burr Ridge's All-Bry Construction Company will build the temporary roller rink and plaza, which is planned to open on July 23.
Burr Ridge’s All-Bry Construction Company will build the temporary roller rink and plaza, which is planned to open on July 23.
Chicago Park District

The Park District selected All-Bry Construction Company to build a temporary structure, planned to open July 23. All-Bry also will build a permanent structure with lighting, furniture, a stage and outdoor activity spaces; construction on that will begin this fall, with plans to open next June.

The temporary project is estimated to cost $1.5 million; the money will come from the state’s Cannabis Regulation Fund. There is no cost estimate for next year’s permanent structure yet, said Ervin.

La Shone Kelly, director of housing at the Garfield Park Community Council, also is on the board of the Garfield Park Wellness Collective.

While agreeing that some activities occurring along the corridor are not “conducive” to family life, “the new center will be a good way to get kids somewhere safe to play.”

On a sunny Wednesday, just days after the groundbreaking ceremony, Allena Johnson and her mother Charone Talley were walking down Madison Street, shopping bags in hand.

When they heard about the rink, they were shocked: neither knew the city was building the rink.

“I’d be there every day!” said Allena, 14.

Ald. Walter Burnett (27th) said the space would become a gathering place for the entire West Side.

“We had a roller rink on the West side some years ago and the only thing everyone always asked for was another roller rink,” Burnett said. “I’m so happy to see that we figured out a way of making it happen.”

It is happening against the wishes of the Garfield Park Chamber of Commerce and Cook County Black Chamber, said Siri Hibbler, CEO and founder of both business groups.

The groups’ online “Save Our Children in Garfield Park” petition, posted in April, had 63 signatures as of Monday. They also are seeking signatures door-to-door, Hibbler said.

“The opposition with us and the business owners in that area and also with the parents is the fact that you put (the outdoor roller rink) right here on the street, where you know you haven’t stopped the crime,” said Hibbler. “Kids would have no protection; bullets have no eyes.”

Residents have acknowledged the dangers an outdoor rink poses but said it offers a distraction from crime and violence — all that’s needed is proper security.

“The young people don’t have nothing to do,” said 74-year-old resident Gregory Lunt. “Give these kids something to do and it will be a much better neighborhood.”

Cheyanne M. Daniels is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communities on the South and West sides.

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Plans for outdoor roller rink in West Garfield Park get mixed reaction in communityon June 28, 2021 at 10:30 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: June 28, 2021on June 28, 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 scattered showers and thunderstorms along with a high near 79 degrees. Similar conditions will continue much of the week with a low around 69 tonight and a high near 83 tomorrow.

Top story

After two mass shootings within hours Sunday night, Lightfoot decries ‘street justice’

Two mass shootings within two hours of each other over the weekend stemmed from gang conflict and retaliatory shootings, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said today, decrying “street justice” driven by a “thirst for revenge.”

“Both incidents appear to be internal gang conflicts. Retaliatory shootings for past incidents,” the mayor said, noting that Chicago police detectives who worked through the night “have some promising leads.”

About a third of the 78 people shot between Friday evening and this morning were wounded in just four attacks, including the two mentioned by the mayor. Four were shot in each of the other two.

Lightfoot said yet another summer weekend marred by mass shootings is “both heartbreaking and frustrating.”

Heartbreaking for those killed and wounded and the people who loved them, she said, and equally heartbreaking for the wounds inflicted “psychologically” on those left “traumatized” by gun violence in their gang-infested neighborhoods.

“What’s also frustrating and heartbreaking is that, for some in our community, their thirst for revenge has no sense of decency. They don’t want to let the criminal justice system play itself out,” the mayor said.

“They want to engage in street justice, which is tragic and terrible because, invariably what happens — like we’ve seen so many times with way too many children in our city across this year — when they aim, they don’t get the target. They get the children and the innocent bystanders who have a right to live in our city without fear of being felled by gun violence.”

Read our full story here.

More news you need

  1. The mass shootings cited by Lightfoot were part of a violent weekend in which seven people were killed and 71 others wounded across Chicago. Almost halfway through 2021, shootings in the city are up 13% compared to last year and 34% compared to 2019.
  2. The Chicago cop who shot and killed Anthony Alvarez during a foot chase earlier this year in Portage Park has been stripped of his police powers. The move had been recommended by a civilian oversight board nearly three months ago.
  3. A Calumet City man who allegedly shot his girlfriend and the mother of his young son “execution style” last week on the South Side was ordered held without bail today. Karim Hunter, 27, is charged with first-degree murder.
  4. Will a new Chicago postmaster lead to improved mail delivery? There’s cautious optimism in the city after Eddie Morgan Jr., a former postmaster in Kansas City, took over the gig earlier this month.
  5. Mayor Lightfoot and community groups pledged today to build 250 homes in North Lawndale to improve the community and help families build wealth. The program involves selling city-owned parcels for $1 each to groups that say they have stitched together private and public funds to support the construction.
  6. A K-Town turnaround could be in the works as firms such as The Will Group invest millions into the West Side neighborhood that’s often been associated with violence and poverty. One of the efforts is being called K-Town Business Centre in an attempt to embrace the community and recast its image.

A bright one

Ex-Bears QB Erik Kramer back from the brink

(Content Warning // suicide attempt)

Former Bears quarterback Erik Kramer checked into the Good Nite Inn in Calabasas, California, on Aug. 18, 2015. He brought the SIG Sauer 9mm handgun he had purchased specifically for the occasion.

Kramer had spent weeks planning his death. He got his finances in order so his son Dillon would be comfortable. He never had fired a handgun before, so he took it to the range to practice.

During a five-year span, Kramer divorced, struggled to connect with Dillon (who decided to live with his mom) and split with his girlfriend. And then death took those closest to him, one by one.

”People aren’t coming,” he thought. ”They’re going.”

Former Bears quarterback sits with lifelong friend Anna Dergan.
Photo courtesy Anna Dergan

When the officers and paramedics arrived at the Good Nite Inn, Chris Germann, a longtime friend, was patched through to Kramer’s hotel room, which he had checked into under his own name. The phone rang. Germann figured he was too late.

”I’ll be damned if he didn’t answer,” Germann said. ”He was moaning.”

Kramer had shot himself. The bullet traveled from under his chin through his tongue and sinus cavity and out the top of his head.

But Kramer was alive.

After his suicide attempt, myriad trials and other challenges, Kramer now says he’s “the most grateful guy walking the planet.” Read Patrick Finley’s full story on how Kramer rebuilt his life with the help of friends and family.

From the press box

Your daily question ?

How has the pandemic changed how you plan for your future?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

On Friday, we asked you: Who’s the biggest celebrity you’ve spotted in Chicago? Tell us where and when you saw them. Here’s what some of you said…

“Tom Hanks when I worked at Northwestern and John Cusack while he was filming High Fidelity on Southport.” — Joe Simonetti

“Michael Jordan, as he trained for baseball at IIT. Best facility to do so because it was a private school and there was no media access. He was a stand up guy.” — Tara Lykowski

“Paul Newman and Robert Redford in 1972. They were filming The Sting at Union Station and requested a tour of the Mercantile Exchange. I worked on the floor while in college and got to shake both their hands.” — Tom Bailey

“I was on the elevator alone with Barack Obama in the Federal building at 230 S. Dearborn when he was a Senator. I saw Oprah Winfrey in a store in Michigan Avenue. I saw Mel Gibson while he was filming a movie in downtown Chicago. I saw R. Kelley when he was Robert Kelley at open mic night at the Cotton Club.” — Kimberly Rogers

“Bono. He stood next to me at The Rolling Stones concert at the Aragon Ballroom just before he went on stage. September 2002.” –Ann Lutterbach

“Maybe not the biggest celebrity but me and Mr. T crossed paths three times in four days. Day 1, he cut me off on LSD. Day 2, he literally bumped into me coming out of the Schubert Theater (Dreamgirls). Two days later he was ten feet from me at a Blackhawks game. Never saw him before, never again.” — Douglas Michel

“Walter Payton in the Arlington Heights Jewel back in the early 80s. He was checking out in front of me.” — Peggy Middleton Sellards

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: June 28, 2021on June 28, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Avli to Offer Grilled Meat and Seafood Platters for Pick-up This 4th of Julyon June 28, 2021 at 8:41 pm

Even though the 4th of July is widely known as the grilling outside on the deck holiday, that isn’t always the easiest options for everyone. Every now and then you want to worry less about the cooking and more about the relaxing. And for those looking to take advantage of just that with a little twist this season, Avli, Chicago’s contemporary Greek dining destinations, will offer grilled meat and seafood platters to-go for prepaid pick-up via Tock or to enjoy in the restaurant this Independence Day. The festive platters will be available at restaurant locations in River North, Lincoln Park and Winnetka.

Platter options available include

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Grilled Meat Platter ($85)

Feeds three to five people
  • Lamb chops
  • Pork souvlaki
  • Beef tenderloin
  • Loukaniko (Greek sausage)
  • Crispy Greek fries
  • Tzatziki sauce

Grilled Seafood Platter ($85)

Feeds three to five people
  • Lavraki
  • Octopus
  • Calamari
  • Scallops
  • Prawns
  • Brussel sprouts
  • Spicy aioli

Pick-up available— as well as in-restaurant reservations—via Tock at the following locations:

Avli Taverna (Lincoln Park), 1335 W Wrightwood Ave., Chicago, IL 60614

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Avli River North, 702 N. Wells St., Chicago, IL 60654

Avli Winnetka, 566 Chestnut St., Winnetka, IL 60093

Grilled platters are currently available to order for prepaid pick-up on 4th of July and will be available for dine-in on the holiday.

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In addition to the newest venue, Avli on The Park in Lakeshore East (now open), Chicagoland-based Avli Foods, LLC includes three additional properties: Inspired Greek dining destination Avli River North, the 2019 and 2021 Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient Avli Taverna in Lincoln Park and Greek family-dining institution Avli Estiatorio in Winnetka. Paying homage to Greek traditions and mythology, the restaurants evoke philoxenia, a welcoming of strangers and an eagerness to show hospitality; present meraki, putting the best of one’s self into cooking and work; and offer the experience of kefi, living life joyfully. Each location features creative and inspired dishes, a lively beverage program including a curated Greek wine list, craft cocktails and traditional spirits, and an ambiance and warm service that reflects life in the Mediterranean. The group’s founding partners are veteran Greek restaurateur Louie Alexakis, celebrated Chicago sportscaster Lou Canellis and seasoned investor William V. Glastris, Jr. For more information, visit their website.

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Featured Image Credit: Avli

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Avli to Offer Grilled Meat and Seafood Platters for Pick-up This 4th of Julyon June 28, 2021 at 8:41 pm Read More »

F9 IS FAST, FARFETCHED, AND SO MUCH FUNon June 28, 2021 at 8:26 pm

Bonnie’s EYE On…!

F9 IS FAST, FARFETCHED, AND SO MUCH FUN

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F9 IS FAST, FARFETCHED, AND SO MUCH FUNon June 28, 2021 at 8:26 pm Read More »

Chicago cop who shot and killed Anthony Alvarez during chase stripped of police powerson June 28, 2021 at 7:00 pm

The Chicago police officer who shot and killed Anthony Alvarez during a foot chase earlier this year in Portage Park has been stripped of his police powers — an action that had been recommended by a civilian oversight board back in April.

Officer Evan Solano was relieved of his duties for the duration of an ongoing investigation into the shooting by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. COPA had recommended that the department take such action but Mayor Lori Lightfoot initially balked at the idea.

A police department spokeswoman declined to answer questions about Solano’s status or exactly when he was stripped of his powers.

Police said the 22-year-old Alvarez was approached by tactical officers at a gas station, and the encounter escalated to a foot pursuit that began in the 3500 block of North Laramie Avenue. He was shot several times from behind by Solano.

It remains unclear why the officers confronted Alvarez.

COPA released a series of video from police-worn body cameras, as well as cameras from a nearby home. It shows Solano yelling, “Drop the gun! Drop the gun!” before firing five shots from close range at Alvarez.

Video shows Alvarez with a gun in his right hand, but the gun drops from his hand as he falls to the pavement.

The shooting happened two days after 13-year-old Adam Toledo was killed by a police officer during a foot chase in Little Village. Both deaths sparked outrage over police use-of -force and the department policy on foot chases.

Todd Pugh, an attorney for the Alvarez family, told the Sun-Times the removal of Solano’s power is long overdue but they are grateful it was finally done.

“We thought after the Logan Square incident he would’ve had his powers removed right away, but we are glad it’s finally being done,” Pugh said.

Solano was the subject of an additional internal police probe that showed him pulling a gun during a road rage incident in Logan Square. In a viral video recorded in May by bystanders, Solano is seen in police uniform exiting a red Ford Mustang with a backwards baseball cap.

After a heated argument, Solano confronts a man with a gun as bystanders shout at him to put it away.

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Chicago cop who shot and killed Anthony Alvarez during chase stripped of police powerson June 28, 2021 at 7:00 pm Read More »

78 people shot in weekend gun violence in Chicago, a third of them from four mass shootingson June 28, 2021 at 7:10 pm

Seven people were killed and 71 others were wounded in weekend shootings in Chicago as the city reaches the halfway point of what could be one of its most violent years in decades.

Four of the attacks were mass shootings with four or more people wounded. The attacks accounted for nearly a third of all the shooting victims between Friday evening and early Monday morning.

Chicago has seen at least 331 homicides so far this year, compared to 319 at this point last year and 247 in 2019. That’s an almost 4 percent increase over last year and a 34 percent increase compared to 2019.

There have been at least 1,842 shootings this year, compared to 1,625 at this time in 2020 and 1,171 in 2019. This year has seen a more than 13 percent increase compared to 2020, and 57 percent compared to 2019.

City Hall and police officials have stressed that the increase in violence from last year to this year has been slowing, with this June seeing fewer homicides and shootings than last June. Still, last year was one of the worst for gun violence since the mid-1990s, and this year is on track for even more shootings and homicides.

Over the weekend, people were shot in 17 of the city’s 22 police districts. The most violent was the Grand Crossing district on the South Side, where six were shot in one attack, four in another and a 14-year-old boy was shot in a third attack.

The most serious attack in the district was in the South Shore neighborhood, where a gunman in a black SUV sprayed bullets at a group of people around 8:45 p.m. Sunday, killing one woman and wounding five other people, according to Chicago police.

Hours later, a woman was killed and at least 10 people were shot in Marquette Park when gunmen stepped from an alley, police said. The neighborhood is in the Chicago Lawn police district which surrounds Midway Airport.

No one was in custody in either shooting. There have been at least eight other mass shootings in Chicago this month.

Police Supt. David Brown blamed the cluster of mass shootings on a surplus of illegal guns on the streets and a court system he complained was too slow to reopen and too lenient in sentencing.

“The answer is too many guns, too many illegal guns in too many hands, and too little consequences,” Brown said in a news conference Monday, a theme he has repeatedly hit during his tenure as Chicago’s top cop.

Chicago is on pace to recover 12,000 illegal guns by the end of the year, which would be a record, surpassing last year’s 11,300 guns, he said.

Brown said the Cook County court system has been too slow to resume criminal trials, and also singled out what he called light consequences for emboldened criminals.

“We have strong advocacy in courts for offenders and very little for victims,” Brown said.

Brown also noted that officers are being shot at in higher numbers than last year. Thirty-one officers have been shot or shot at this year, he said. By the end of 2020, 79 officers had been shot or shot at, he said.

West Pullman homicide

Early Sunday, a man was fatally shot in West Pullman on the Far South Side. Officers responded to a Shot Spotter alert and found the 24-year-old in the 11700 block of South Laflin Street, police said.

He suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene. His name was not released and no arrest was reported.

Englewood murder

Before dawn on Saturday, a 54-year-old man was shot and killed in Englewood on the South Side. Darryl Griffin was standing outside around 3 a.m. in the 600 block of West 61st Place when someone inside a passing SUV opened fire, police said. Griffin was shot in his torso and taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he died, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. Police reported no arrests.

Humboldt Park homicide

Early Saturday, 25-year-old Niko Davis was shot and killed around 4:35 a.m. in the 2600 block of West Thomas Street in Humboldt Park, Chicago police said. Shot in his chest, he was taken to Stroger Hospital and pronounced dead.

Man killed, 3 wounded in West Rogers Park

An hour later, a man was killed and three others wounded after getting into an argument in West Rogers Park on the North Side.

About 5:30 a.m., the group was in the 6100 block of North McCormick Boulevard when they got into an argument with a man who pulled out a gun and began firing shots, police said.

Joseph Darnell Johnson, 35, was shot in his chest and leg, and died at St. Francis Hospital in Evanston, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said. Three other wounded men were hospitalized with injuries that weren’t life-threatening, police said.

Man allegedly kills girlfriend in Chatham apartment

A Calumet City man allegedly shot his girlfriend and the mother of his young son “execution style” at the beginning of the weekend in Chatham.

Jeaneen Walters, 30, was found in the early morning hours Saturday in her apartment in the 700 block of East 79th Street lying face down with a bullet wound in the back of her head, prosecutors said Monday.

Karim Hunter, 27, who is charged with first-degree murder, originally told investigators he had nothing to do with his girlfriend’s death, but then changed his story multiple times, prosecutors said, including saying she’d committed suicide. Hunter eventually said the couple had been in an argument and that the gun had gone off “accidentally,” prosecutors said.

A witness, Walters’ cousin, told investigators Walters had said on June 19 that she was unhappy in her relationship and was planning to end it.

Hunter also allegedly told investigators that he’d wrapped up the gun and had thrown it in the Calumet River, prosecutors said.

Hunter’s phone records show that he called his brother about 3:30 a.m. June 26 and asked for a ride, prosecutors said. Video surveillance from a nearby business allegedly shows Hunter leaving his girlfriend’s apartment and then returning a little while later to pick up a phone.

Other shootings

  • A woman was wounded Friday in Austin on the West Side. She was walking about 9:10 p.m. in the 200 block of South Cicero Avenue when someone opened fire, striking her in the leg, police said. The 56-year-old was taken to Stroger Hospital, where her condition was stabilized.
  • Another woman was wounded in a shooting late Friday in Bridgeport on the South Side. The 28-year-old was traveling in a vehicle as a passenger about 11:25 p.m. in the 2800 block of South Wallace Avenue when three males who were standing outside fired shots at the vehicle, police said. A bullet struck her in the elbow, and she was taken to Mercy Hospital in good condition, police said.
  • Minutes later, four people were hurt, two critically, in a shooting in Park Manor on the South Side. A group was standing outside about 11:50 p.m. when a person drove past in a red moped and fired shots in the 7000 block of South Indiana Avenue, police said.

    One woman was shot three times on the body and was taken in critical condition to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, police said. The other was struck in the thigh and was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where her condition was stable.

    One man was also critically hurt with a gunshot wound to the head, police said. He was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, police said. The other man was shot in the thigh and taken to the same hospital, where his condition was stable.

At least 46 other people were wounded in shootings in Chicago between 5 p.m. Friday and 5 a.m. Monday.

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78 people shot in weekend gun violence in Chicago, a third of them from four mass shootingson June 28, 2021 at 7:10 pm Read More »

Murder charge filed in St. Charles nightclub shootingon June 28, 2021 at 7:29 pm

An Aurora man has been charged with opening fire in the parking lot of a St. Charles nightclub early Sunday, killing a man and wounding three others.

Michael D.V. Carwell, 22, faces counts of murder, attempted murder and aggravated battery with a firearm in the attack at Trilogy Nightclub, 2051 Lincoln Hwy.

Carwell approached and fired upon Khalief McCallister as he left the business around 2 a.m., Kane County prosecutors said. The gunfire struck and killed McCallister, 23, and injured three others.

Carwell was arrested Sunday and ordered held on $3 million bail, prosecutors said.

He was expected in court again July 16.

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Murder charge filed in St. Charles nightclub shootingon June 28, 2021 at 7:29 pm Read More »

Former WNBA Most Valuable Player Maya Moore will receive Arthur Ashe Award at The ESPYSon June 28, 2021 at 7:31 pm

NEW YORK — Maya Moore will receive the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at The ESPYS for her work on criminal justice reform.

The four-time WNBA champion will receive the honor from “Good Morning America’s” Robin Roberts on July 10 in New York. It’s the same day that the late tennis champion would have turned 78.

Moore stepped away from her basketball career in 2019 to seek justice for Jonathan Irons, who was serving a 50-year prison sentence after being wrongly convicted of burglary and assault. Irons’ conviction was overturned last year and he was freed. The couple later married.

Moore formed a “Win With Justice” campaign to educate the public on the power of prosecutors and organize for Irons’ freedom.

Moore has won two Olympic gold medals and been the WNBA’s MVP and a three-time MVP at the league’s All-Star Game. She is the subject of the film “Breakaway,” which will debut July 13 on ESPN and re-air Aug. 8 on ABC.

The Ashe Award is given to individuals whose contributions transcend sports. Among the previous honorees are Muhammad Ali, Billie Jean King and Pat Summitt.

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Former WNBA Most Valuable Player Maya Moore will receive Arthur Ashe Award at The ESPYSon June 28, 2021 at 7:31 pm Read More »